Homeland
By R.A. Salvatore
Part 1
Station
Station: In all the world of the drow, there is no more important word. It is the
calling of their, of our religion, the incessant pulling of hungering heartstrings.
Ambition overrides good sense and compassion is thrown away in its face, all in
the name of Lloth, the Spider Queen.
Ascension to power in drow society is a simple process of assassination. The
Spider Queen is a deity of chaos, and she and her high priestesses, the true
rulers of the drow world, do not look with ill favor upon ambitious individuals
wielding poisoned daggers.
Of course, there are rules of behavior, every society must boast of these. To
openly commit murder or wage war invites the pretense of justice, and penalties
exacted in the name of drow justice are merciless. To stick a dagger in the back
of a rival during the chaos of a larger battle or in the quiet shadows of an alley,
however, is quite acceptable, even applauded. Investigation is not the forte of
drow justice. No one cares enough to bother
Station is the way of Lloth, the ambition she bestows to further the chaos, to keep
her drow "children" along their appointed course of self imprisonment. Children?
Pawns more likely, dancing dolls for the Spider Queen, puppets on the
imperceptible but impervious strands of her web. All climb the Spider Queen's
ladders; all hunt for her pleasure, and all fall to the hunters of her pleasure.
Station is the paradox of the world of my people, the limitation of our power within
the hunger for power. It is gained through treachery and invites treachery against
those who gain it. Those most powerful in Menzoberranzan spend their days
watching over their shoulders, defending
against the daggers that would find their backs.
Their deaths usually come from the front.
-Drizzt Do'Urden
Part 1
Chapter 1
Menzoberranzan
To a surface dweller, he might have passed undetected only a foot away. The
padded footfalls of his lizard mount were too light to be heard, and the pliable
and perfectly crafted mesh armor that both rider and mount wore bent and
creased with their movements as well as if the suits had grown over their skin.
Dinin's lizard trotted along in an easy but swift gait, floating over the broken floor,
up the walls, and even across the long tunnel's ceiling. Subterranean lizards, with
their sticky and soft three-toed feet, were preferred mounts for just this ability to
scale stone as easily as a spider. Crossing hard ground left no damning tracks in
the lighted surface world, but nearly all of the creatures of the Underdark
possessed infravision, the ability to see in the infrared spectrum. Foot-falls left
heat residue that could easily be tracked if they followed
a predictable course along a corridor's floor.
Dinin clamped tight to his saddle as the lizard plodded along a stretch of the
ceiling, then sprang out in a twisting descent to a point farther along the wall.
Dinin did not want to be tracked.
He had no light to guide him, but he needed none. He was a dark elf, a drow, an
ebon-skinned cousin of those sylvan folk who danced under the stars on the
world's surface. To Dinin's superior eyes, which translated subtle variations of
heat into vivid and colorful images, the Underdark was far from a lightless place.
Colors all across the spectrum swirled before him in the stone of the walls and
the floor, heated by some distant fissure or hot stream. The heat of living things
was the most distinctive, letting the dark elf view his enemies in details as
intricate as any surface dweller would find in brilliant daylight.
Normally Dinin would not have left the city alone, the world of the Underdark was
too dangerous for solo treks, even for a drow elf. This day was different, though.
Dinin had to be certain that no unfriendly drow eyes marked his passage.
A soft blue magical glow beyond a sculpted archway told the drow that he neared
the city's entrance, and he slowed the lizard's pace accordingly. Few used this
narrow tunnel, which opened into Tier Breche, the northern section of
Menzoberranzan devoted to the Academy, and none but the mistresses and
masters, the instructors of the Academy, could pass through here without
attracting suspicion.
Dinin was always nervous when he came to this point. Of the hundred tunnels
that opened off the main cavern of Menzoberranzan, this one was the best
guarded. Beyond the archway, twin statues of gigantic spiders sat in quiet
defense. If an enemy crossed through, the spiders would animate and attack,
and alarms would be sounded all throughout the Academy.
Dinin dismounted, leaving his lizard clinging comfortably to a wall at his chest
level. He reached under the collar of his piwafwi, his magical, shielding cloak,
and took out his neck purse. From this Dinin produced the insignia of House
Do'Urden, a spider wielding various weapons in each of its eight legs and
emblazoned with the letters "DN"' for Daermon N'a'shezbaernon, the ancient and
formal name of House Do'Urden.
"You will await my return" Dinin whispered to the lizard as he waved the insignia
before it. As with all the drow houses, the insignia of House Do'Urden held
several magical dweomers, one of which gave family members absolute control
over the house pets. The lizard would obey unfailingly, holding its position as
though it were rooted to the stone, even if a scurry rat, its favorite morsel, napped
a few feet from its maw.
Dinin took a deep breath and gingerly stepped to the archway. He could see the
spiders leering down at him from their fifteen-foot height. He was a drow of the
city, not an enemy, and could pass through any other tunnel unconcerned, but
the Academy was an unpredictable place, Dinin
had heard that the spiders often refused entry viciously,even to uninvited drow.
He could not be delayed by fears and possibilities, Dinin reminded himself. His
business was of the utmost importance to his family's battle plans. Looking
straight ahead, away from the towering spiders, he strode between them and
onto the floor of Tier Breche.
He moved to the side and paused, first to be certain that no one lurked nearby,
and then to admire the sweeping view of Menzoberranzan. No one, drow or
otherwise, had ever looked out from this spot without a sense of wonder at the
drow city. Tier Breche was the highest point on the floor of the two-mile cavern,
affording a panoramic view to the rest of Menzoberranzan. The cubby of the
Academy was narrow, holding only the three structures that comprised the drow
school: Arach Tinilith, the spider-shaped school of Lloth, Sorcere, the gracefully
curving, many-spired tower
of wizardry, and Melee Magthere, the somewhat plain pyramidal structure where
male fighters learned their trade. Beyond Tier Breche, through the ornate
stalagmite columns that marked the entrance to the Academy, the cavern
dropped away quickly and spread wide, going far beyond Dinin's line of vision to
either side and farther back then his keen eyes could possibly see. The colors of
Menzoberranzan were threefold to the sensitive eyes of the drow. Heat patterns
from various fissures and hot springs swirled about the entire cavern. Purple and
red, bright yellow and subtle blue, crossed and merged, climbed the walls and
stalagmite mounds, or ran off singularly in cutting lines against the backdrop of
dim gray stone. More confined than these generalized and natural gradations of
color in the infrared spectrum were the regions of intense magic, like the spiders
Dinin had walked between, virtually glowing with energy. Finally there were the
actual lights of the city, faerie fire and highlighted sculptures on the houses. The
drow were proud of the beauty of their designs, and especially ornate columns or
perfectly crafted gargoyles were almost always limned in permanent magical
lights.
Even from this distance Dinin could make out House Baenre, First House of
Menzoberranzan. It encompassed twenty stalagmite pillars and half again that
number of gigantic stalactites. House Baenre had existed for five thousand years,
since the founding of Menzoberranzan, and in
that time the work to perfect the house's art had never ceased. Practically every
inch of the immense structure glowed in faerie fire, blue at the outlying towers
and brilliant purple at the huge central dome.
The sharp light of candles, foreign to the Underdark, glared through some of the
windows of the distant houses. Only clerics or wizards would light the fires, Dinin
knew, as necessary pains in their world of scrolls and parchments.
This was Menzoberranzan, the city of drow. Threnty thousand dark elves lived
there, twenty thousand soldiers in the army of evil.
A wicked smile spread across Dinin's thin lips when he thought of some of those
soldiers who would fall this night.
Dinin studied Narbondel, the huge central pillar that served as the timeclock of
Menzoberranzan. Narbondel was, the only way the drow had to mark the
passage of time in aworld that otherwise knew no days and no seasons. At the
end of each day, the city's appointed Archmage cast his magical fires into the
base of the stone pillar. There the spell lingered throughout the cycle a full day
on the surface and gradually spread its warmth up the structure of Narbondel
until the whole of it glowed red in the infrared spectrum. The pillar was fully dark
now, cooled since the dweomer's fires had expired. The wizard was even now at
the base, Dinin reasoned, ready to begin the cycle anew.
It was midnight, the appointed hour.
Dinin moved away from the spiders and the tunnel exit and crept along the side
of Tier Breche, seeking the "shadows" of heat patterns in the wall, which would
effectively hide the distinct outline of his own body temperatures. He came at last
to Sorcere, the school of wizardry, and slipped into the narrow alley between the
tower's curving base and Tier Breche's outer wall.
"Student or master?" came the expected whisper.
"Only a master may walk out of house in Tier Breche in
the black death of Narbondel” Dinin responded.
A heavily robed figure moved around the arc of the structure to stand before
Dinin. The stranger remained in the customary posture of a master of the drow
Academy, his arms out before him and bent at the elbows, his hands tight
together, one on top of the other in front of his chest.
That pose was the only thing about this one that seemed normal to Dinin.
"Greetings, Faceless One" he signaled in the silent hand code of the drow, a
language as detailed as the spoken word. The quiver of Dinin's hands belied his
calm face, though, for the sight of this wizard put him as far on the edge of his
nerves as he had ever been.
"Secondboy Do'Urden" the wizard replied in the gestured
code. "Have you my payment?"
"You will be compensated" Dinin signaled pointedly, regaining his composure in
the first swelling bubbles of his temper. "Do you dare to doubt the promise of
Malice Do'Urden, Matron Mother of Daermon N'a'shezbaernon, Tenth House of
Menzoberranzan?"
The Faceless One slumped back, knowing he had erred.
"My apologies, Secondboy of House Do'Urden” he answered, dropping to one
knee in a gesture of surrender. Since he had entered this conspiracy, the wizard
had feared that his impatience might cost him his life. He had been caught in the
violent throes of one of his own magical experiments, the tragedy melting away
all of his facial features and leaving behind a blank hot spot of white and green
goo. Matron Malice Do'Urden, reputedly as skilled as anyone in all the vast city in
mixing potions and salves, had offered him a sliver of hope that he could not
pass by.
No pity found its way into Dinin's callous heart, but House Do'Urden needed the
wizard. "You will get your salve” Dinin promised calmly, "when Alton DeVir is
dead”
"Of course” the wizard agreed. "This night?"
Dinin crossed his arms and considered the question. Matron Malice had
instructed him that Alton DeVir should die even as their families' battle
commenced. That scenario now seemed too clean, too easy, to Dinin. The
Faceless One did not miss the sparkle that suddenly brightened the scarlet glow
in the young Do'Urden's heat-sensing eyes.
"Wait for Narbondel's light to approach its zenith” Dinin replied, his hands working
through the signals excitedly and his grimace seeming more of a twisted grin.
"Should the doomed boy know of his house's fate before he dies?" the wizard
asked, guessing the wicked intentions behind Dinin's instructions.
"As the killing blow falls” answered Dinin. "Let Alton
DeVir die without hope”
Dinin retrieved his mount and sped off down the empty corridors, finding an
intersecting route that would take him in through a different entrance to the city
proper. He came in along the eastern end of the great cavern, Menzoberranzan's
produce section, where no drow families would see that he had been outside the
city limits and where only a few unremarkable stalagmite pillars rose up from the
flat stone. Dinin spurred his mount along the banks of Donigarten, the city's small
pond with its moss-covered island that housed a fair-sized herd of cattlelike
creatures called rothe. A hundred goblins and orcs looked up from their herding
and fishing duties to mark the drow soldier's swift passage.
Knowing their restrictions as slaves, they took care not to look Dinin in the eye.
Dinin would have paid them no heed anyway. He was too consumed by the
urgency of the moment. He kicked his lizard to even greater speeds when he
again was on the flat and curving avenues between the glowing drow castles. He
moved toward the south-central region of the city, toward
the grove of giant mushrooms that marked the section of the finest houses in
Menzoberranzan.
As he came around one blind turn, he nearly ran over a group of four wandering
bugbears. The giant hairy goblin things paused a moment to consider the drow,
then moved slowly but purposefully out of his way.
The bugbears recognized him as a member of House Do'Urden, Dinin knew. He
was a noble, a son of a high priestess, and his surname, Do'Urden, was the
name of his house. Of the twenty thousand dark elves in Menzoberranzan, only a
thousand or so were nobles, actually the chil.
dren of the sixty-seven recognized families of the city. The
rest were common soldiers.
Bugbears were not stupid creatures. They knew a noble from a commoner, and
though drow elves did not carry their family insignia in plain view, the pointed and
tailed cut of Dinin's stark white hair and the distinctive pattern of purple and red
lines in his black piwafwi told them well enough who he was.
The mission's urgency pressed upon Dinin, but he could not ignore the bugbears'
slight. How fast would they have scampered away if he had been a member of
House Baenre or one of the other seven ruling houses? he wondered.
"You will learn respect of House Do'Urden soon enough!" the dark elf whispered
under his breath, as he turned and charged his lizard at the group. The bugbears
broke into a run, turning down an alley strewn with stones and debris.
Dinin found his satisfaction by calling on the innate powers of his race. He
summoned a globe of darkness impervious to both infravision and normal sight in
the fleeing creatures' path. He supposed that it was unwise to call such attention
to himself, but a moment later, when he heard crashing and sputtered curses as
the bugbears stumbled blindly over the stones, he felt it was worth the risk.
His anger sated, he moved off again, picking a more careful route through the
heat shadows. As a member of the tenth house of the city, Dinin could go as he
pleased within the giant cavern without question, but Matron Malice had made it
clear that no one connected to House Do'Urden was to be caught anywhere near
the mushroom grove.
Matron Malice, Dinin's mother, was not to be crossed, but it was only a rule, after
all. In Menzoberranzan, one rule, took precedence over all of the petty others,
Don't get caught.
At the mushroom grove's southern end, the impetuous drow found what he was
looking for: a cluster of five huge floor-to-ceiling pillars that were hollowed into a
network of chambers and connected with metal and stone parapets and bridges.
Red-glowing gargoyles, the standard of the house, glared down from a hundred
perches like silent sentries. This was House DeVir, Fourth House of
Menzoberranzan.
A stockade of tall mushrooms ringed the place, every fifth one a shrieker, a
sentient fungus named (and favored as guardians) for the shrill cries of alarm it
emitted whenever a living being passed it by. Dinin kept a cautious distance, not
wanting to set off one of the shriekers and knowing also that other, more deadly
wards protected the fortress. Matron Malice would see to those.
An expectant hush permeated the air of this city section. It was general
knowledge throughout Menzoberranzan that Matron Ginafae of House DeVir had
fallen out of favor with Loth, the Spider Queen deity to all drow and the true
source of every house's strength. Such circumstances were
never openly discussed among the drow, but everyone who knew fully expected
that some family lower in the city hierarchy soon would strike out against the
crippled House DeVir.
Matron Ginafae and her family had been the last to learn of the Spider Queen's
displeasure ever was that Lloth's devious way and Dinin could tell just by
scanning the outside of House DeVir that the doomed family had not found
ample time to erect proper defenses. DeVir sported nearly
four hundred soldiers, many female, but those that Dinin could now see at their
posts along the parapets seemed nervous and unsure.
Dinin's smile spread even wider when he thought of his own house, which grew
in power daily under the cunning guidance of Matron Malice. With all three of his
sisters rapidly approaching the status of high priestess, his brother an
accomplished wizard, and his uncle Zaknafein, the finest weapon master in all of
Menzoberranzan, busily training
the three hundred soldiers, House Do'Urden was a complete force. And, Matron
Malice, unlike Ginafae, was in the Spider Queen's full favor.
"Daermon N'a'shezbaernon," Dinin muttered under his breath, using the formal
and ancestral reference to House Do'Urden. "Ninth House of Menzoberranzan!"
He liked the sound of it.
Halfway across the city, beyond the silver-glowing balcony and the arched
doorway twenty feet up the cavern's west wall, sat the principals of House
Do'Urden, gathered to outline the final plans of the night's work. On the raised
dais at the back of the small audience chamber sat venerable Matron Malice, her
belly swollen in the final hours of pregnancy. Flanking her in their places of honor
were her three daughters, Maya, Vierna, and the eldest, Briza, a newly ordained
high priestess of Lloth. Maya and Vierna appeared as younger versions of their
mother, slender and deceptively small, though possessing great strength. Briza,
though, hardly carried the family resemblance. She was
big- huge by drow standards-and rounded in the shoulders and hips. Those who
knew Briza well figured that her size was merely a circumstance of her
temperament, a smaller body could not have contained the anger and brutal
streak of House Do'Urden's newest high priestess.
"Dinin should return soon" remarked Rizzen, the present patron of the family, "to
let us know if the time is right for the assault."
"We go before Narbondel finds its morning glow!" Briza snapped at him in her
thick but razor-sharp voice. She turned a crooked smile to her mother, seeking
approval for putting the male in his place.
"The child comes this night” Matron Malice explained to her anxious husband.
"We go no matter what news Dinin bears."
"It will be a boy child” groaned Briza, making no effort to hide her disappointment,
"third living son of House Do'Orden."
"To be sacrificed to Lloth” put in Zaknafein, a former patron of the house who
now held the important position of weapon master. The skilled drow fighter
seemed quite pleased at the thought of sacrifice, as did Nalfein, the family's
eldest son, who stood at Zak's side. Nalfein was the elderboy, and he needed no
more competition beyond Dinin within the ranks of House Do'Urden.
"In accord with custom” Briza glowered and the red of her eyes brightened. "To
aid in our victory!" Rizzen shifted uncomfortably. "Matron Malice” he dared to
speak, "you know well the difficulties of birthing. Might the pain distract you"
"You dare to question the matron mother?" Briza started sharply, reaching for the
snake-headed whip so comfortably strapped and writhing on her belt. Matron
Malice stopped her with an outstretched hand.
"Attend to the fighting” the matron said to Rizzen. "Let the females of the house
see to the important matters of this battle."
Rizzen shifted again and dropped his gaze.
Dinin came to the magically wrought fence that connected the keep within the
city's west wall with the two small stalagmite towers of House Do'Orden, and
which formed the courtyard to the compound. The fence was adamantite, the
hardest metal in all the world, and adorning it were a hundred weapon-wielding
spider carvings, each ensorcelled with deadly glyphs and wards. The mighty gate
of House Do'Orden was the envy of many a drow house, but so soon after
viewing the spectacular houses in the mushroom grove, Dinin could only find
disappointment when looking upon his own abode. The compound was plain and
somewhat bare, as was the section of wall, with the notable exception of the
mithril-and-adamantite balcony running along the second level, by the arched
doorway reserved for the nobility of the family. Each baluster of that balcony
sported a thousand carvings, all of which blended into a single piece of art.
House Do'Urden, unlike the great majority of the houses in Menzoberranzan, did
not stand free within groves of stalactites and stalagmites. The bulk of the
structure was within a cave, and while this setup was indisputably defensible,
Dinin found himself wishing that his family could show a bit more grandeur.
An excited soldier rushed to open the gate for the returning secondboy. Dinin
swept past him without so much as a word of greeting and moved across the
courtyard, conscious of the hundred and more curious glances that fell upon him.
The soldiers and slaves knew that Dinin's mission
this night had something to do with the anticipated battle.
No stairway led to the silvery balcony of House Do'Urden's second level. This,
too, was a precautionary measure designed to segregate the leaders of the
house from the rabble and the slaves. Drow nobles needed no stairs, another
manifestation of their innate magical abilities allowed them the power of
levitation. With hardly a conscious thought to the act, Dinin drifted easily through
the air and dropped onto the balcony.
He rushed through the archway and down the house's main central corridor,
which was dimly lit in the soft hues of faerie fire, allowing for sight in the normal
light spectrum but not bright enough to defeat the use of infravision. The ornate
brass door at the corridor's end marked the second boy's destination, and he
paused before it to allow his eyes to shift back to the infrared spectrum. Unlike
the corridor, the room beyond the door had no light source. It was the audience
hall of the high priestesses, the anteroom to House Do'Urden's grand chapel.
The drow clerical rooms, in accord with the dark rites of the Spider Queen, were
not places of light.
When he felt he was prepared, Dinin pushed straight through the door, shoving
past the two shocked female guards without hesitation and moving boldly to
stand before his mother. All three of the family daughters narrowed their eyes at
their brash and pretentious brother. You enter
without permission! he knew they were thinking. Would that it was he who was to
be sacrificed this night!
As much as he enjoyed testing the limitations of his inferior station as a male,
Dinin could not ignore the threatening glances of Vierna, Maya, and Briza. Being
female, they were bigger and stronger than Dinin and had trained all of their lives
in the use of wicked drow clerical powers and weapons. Dinin watched as
enchanted extensions of the
clerics, the dreaded snake-headed whips on his sisters' belts, began writhing in
anticipation of the punishment they would exact. The handles were adamantite
and ordinary enough, but the whips' lengths and multiple heads were living
serpents. Briza's whip, in particular, a wicked six-headed device, danced and
squirmed, tying itself into knots around the belt that held it. Briza was always the
quickest to punish.
Matron Malice, however, seemed pleased by Dinin's swagger. The secondboy
knew his place well enough by her measure and he followed her commands
fearlessly and without question.
Dinin took comfort in the calmness of his mother's face, quite the opposite of the
shining white-hot faces of his three sisters. "All is ready” he said to her. "House
DeVir huddles within its fence-except for Alton, of course, foolishly attending his
studies in Sorcere."
"You have met with the Faceless One?" Matron Malice asked.
"The Academy was quiet this night” Dinin replied. "Our meeting went off
perfectly."
"He has agreed to our contract?"
"Alton DeVir will be dealt with accordingly," Dinin chuckled. He then remembered
the slight alteration he had made in Matron Malice's plans, delaying Alton's
execution for the sake of his own lust for added cruelty. Dinin's thought evoked
another recollection as well: high priestesses of Lloth had an unnerving talent for
reading thoughts.
"Alton will die this night” Dinin quickly completed the answer, assuring the others
before they could probe him for more definite details.
"Excellent," Briza growled. Dinin breathed a little easier.
"To the meld," Matron Malice ordered.
The four drow males moved to kneel before the matron and her daughters:
Rizzen to Malice, Zaknafein to Briza, Nalfein to Maya, and Dinin to Vierna. The
clerics chanted in unison, placing one hand delicately upon the forehead of their
respective soldier, tuning in to his passions.
"You know your places” Matron Malice said when the ceremony was completed.
She grimaced through the pain of another contraction. "Let our work begin”
Less than an hour later, Zaknafein and Briza stood together on the balcony
outside the upper entrance to House Do'Urden. Below them, on the cavern floor,
the second and third brigades of the family army, Rizzen's and Nalfein's, bustled
about, fitting on heated leather straps and metal patches-camouflage against a
distinctive elven form to heat-seeing drow eyes. Dinin's group, the initial strike
force that included a hundred goblin slaves, had long since departed.
"We will be known after this night” Briza said. "None would have suspected that a
tenth house would dare to move against one as powerful as DeVir. When the
whispers ripple out after this night's bloody work, even Baenre will take note of
Daermon N'a'shezbaernon!" She leaned out
over the balcony to watch as the two brigades formed into lines and started-out,
silently, along separate paths that would bring them through the winding city to
the mushroom grove and the five-pillared structure of House DeVir. Zaknafein
eyed the back of Matron Malice's eldest daughter, wanting nothing more than to
put a dagger into her
spine. As always, though, good judgment kept Zak's practiced hand in its place.
"Have you the articles?" Briza inquired, showing Zak considerably more respect
than she had when Matron Malice sat protectively at her side. Zak was only a
male, a commoner allowe to don the family name as his own because he
sometimes served Matron Malice in a husbandly manner and had once been the
patron of the house. Still, Briza feared to anger him. Zak was the weapon master
of House Do'Urden, a tall and muscular male, stronger than most females, and
those who had witnessed his fighting wrath considered him among the finest
warriors of either sex in all of Menzoberranzan. Besides Briza and her mother,
both high priestesses of the Spider Queen, Zaknafein, with his unrivaled
swordsmanship, was House Do'Urden's trump.
Zak held up the black hood and opened the small pouch on his belt, revealing
several tiny ceramic spheres. Briza smiled evilly and rubbed her slender hands
together. "Matron Ginafae will not be pleased” she whispered.
Zak returned the smile and turned to view the departing soldiers. Nothing gave
the weapon master more pleasure than killing drow elves, particularly clerics of
Lloth.
"Prepare yourself” Briza said after a few minutes.
Zak shook his thick hair back from his face and stood rigid, eyes tightly closed.
Briza drew her wand slowly, beginning the chant that would activate the device.
She tapped Zak on one shoulder, then the other, then held the wand motionless
over his head.
Zak felt the frosty sprinkles falling down on him, permeating his clothes and
armor, even his flesh, until he and all of his possessions had cooled to a uniform
temperature and hue. Zak hated the magical chill, it felt as he imagined death
would feel but he knew that under the influence of the wand's sprinkles he was,
to the heat-sensing eyes of the creatures of the Underdark, as gray as common
stone, unremarkable and undetectable.
Zak opened his eyes and shuddered, flexing his fingers to be sure they could still
perform the fine-edge of his craft. He looked back to Briza, already in the midst of
the second spell, the summoning. This one would take a while, so Zak leaned
back against the wall and considered again the pleasant, though dangerous, task
before him. How thoughtful of Matron Malice to leave all of House DeVir's clerics
to him!
"It is done” Briza announced after a few minutes. She led Zak's gaze upward, to
the darkness beneath the unseen ceiling of the immense cavern.
Zak spotted Briza's handiwork first, an approaching current of air, yellow-tinted
and warmer than the normal air of the cavern. A living current of air.
The creature, a conjuration from an elemental plane, swirled to hover just beyond
the lip of the balcony, obediently awaiting its summoner's commands.
Zak didn't hesitate. He leaped out into the thing's midst, letting it hold him
suspended above the floor.
Briza offered him a final salute and motioned her servant away. "Good fighting”
she called to Zak, though he was already invisible in the air above her.
Zak chuckled at the irony of her words as the twisting city of Menzoberranzan
rolled out below him. She wanted the clerics of House DeVir dead as surely as
Zak did, but for very different reasons. All complications aside, Zak would have
been just as happy killing clerics of House Do'Urden.
The weapon master took up one of his adamantite swords, a drow weapon
magically crafted and unbelievably sharp with the edge of killing dweomers.
"Good fighting indeed” he whispered. If only Briza knew how good.
Chapter 2
The Fall of House DeVir
Dinin noted with satisfaction that any of the meandering bugbears, or any other
of the multitude of races that composed Menzoberranzan, drow included, now
made great haste to scurry out of his way. This time the secondboy of House
Do'Urden was not alone. Nearly sixty soldiers of the house walked in tight lines
behind him. Behind these, in similar order though with far less enthusiasm for the
adventure, came a hundred armed slaves of lesser races, goblins, orcs, and
bugbears.
There could be no doubt for onlookers, a drow house was on a march to war.
This was not an everyday event in Menzoberranzan but neither was it
unexpected. At least once every decade a house decided that its position within
the city hierarchy could be improved by another house's elimination. It was a
risky proposition, for all of the nobles of the "victim" house had to be disposed of
quickly and quietly. If even one survived to lay an accusation upon the
perpetrator, the attacking house would be eradicated by Menzoberranzan's
merciless system of "justice”
If the raid was executed to devious perfection, though, no recourse would be
forthcoming. All of the city, even the ruling council of the top eight matron
mothers, would secretly applaud the attackers for their courage and intelligence
and no more would ever be said of the incident.
Dinin took a roundabout route, not wanting to lay a direct trail between House
Do'Urden and House DeVir. A half-hour later, for the second time that night, he
crept to the mushroom grove's southern end, to the cluster of stalagmites that
held House DeVir. His soldiers streamed out behind him eagerly, readying
weapons and taking full measure of the structure before them.
The slaves were slower in their movements. Many of them looked about for some
escape, for they knew in their hearts that they were doomed in this battle. They
feared the wrath of the dark elves more than death itself, though, and would not
attempt to flee. With every exit out of Menzoberranzan protected by devious drow
magic, where could they possibly go? Every one of them had witnessed the
brutal punishments the drow elves exacted on recaptured slaves. At Dinin's
command, they jumped into their positions around the mushroom fence.
Dinin reached into his large pouch and pulled out a heated sheet of metal. He
flashed the object, brightened in the infrared spectrum, three times behind him to
signal the approaching brigades of Nalfein and Rizzen. Then, with his usual
cockiness, Dinin spun it quickly into the air, caught it, and replaced it in the
secrecy of his heat shielding pouch. On cue with the twirling signal, Dinin's drow
brigade fitted enchanted darts to their tiny hand-held crossbows and took aim on
the appointed targets.
Every fifth mushroom was a shrieker, and every dart held a magical dweomer
that could silence the roar of a dragon." . . . two. . . three” Dinin counted, his hand
signaling the tempo since no words could be heard within the sphere of magical
silence cast about his troops. He imagined the "click" as the drawn string on his
little weapon released, loosing the dart into the nearest shrieker. So it went all
around the cluster of House DeVir, the first line of alarm systematically silenced
by three-dozen enchanted darts.
Halfway across Menzoberranzan, Matron Malice, her daughters, and four of the
house's common clerics were gathered in Lloth's unholy circle of eight. They
ringed an idol of their wicked deity, a gemstone carving of a drow faced spider,
and called to Lloth for aid in their struggles. Malice sat at the head, propped in a
chair angled for birthing. Briza and Vierna flanked her, Briza clutching her hand.
The select group chanted in unison, combining their energies into a single
offensive. spell. A moment later, when Vierna, mentally linked to Dinin,
understood that the first attack group was in position, the Do'Urden circle of eight
sent the first insinuating waves of mental energy into the rival house.
Matron Ginafae, her two daughters, and the five principal clerics of the common
troops of House DeVir huddled together in the darkened anteroom of the fivestalagmite
house's main chapel. They had gathered there in solemn prayer every
night since Matron Ginafae had learned that she had fallen into Lloth's disfavor.
Ginafae understood how vulnerable her house remained until she could find a
way to appease the Spider Queen. There were sixty-six other houses in
Menzoberranzan, fully twenty of which might dare to attack House DeVir at such
an obvious disadvantage.
The eight clerics were anxious now, somehow suspecting that this night would be
eventful.
Ginafae felt it first, a chilling blast of confusing perceptions that caused her to
stutter over her prayer of forgiveness. The other clerics of House DeVir glanced
nervously at the matron's uncharacteristic slip of words, looking for confirmation.
"We are under attack” Ginafae breathed to them, her head already pounding with
a dull ache under the growing assault of the formidable clerics of House
Do'Urden.
A second signal from Dinin put the slave troops into motion. Still using stealth as
their ally, they quietly rushed to the mushroom fence and cut through with widebladed
swords. The secondboy of House Do'Urden watched and enjoyed as the
courtyard of House DeVir was easily penetrated. "Not such a prepared guard” he
whispered in silent sarcasm to the red-glowing gargoyles on the high walls. The
statues had seemed such an ominous guard earlier that night. Now they just
watched helplessly.
Dinin recognized the measured but growing anticipation in the soldiers around
him, their drow battle-lust was barely contained. Every now and then came a
killing flash as one of the slaves stumbled over a warding glyph, but the
secondboy and the other drow only laughed at the spectacle.
The lesser races were the expendable "fodder" of House Do'Urden's army.
The only purpose in bringing the goblinoids to House DeVir was to trigger the
deadly traps and defenses along the perimeter, to lead the way for the drow
elves, the true soldiers.
The fence was now opened and secrecy was thrown away. House DeVir's
soldiers met the invading slaves head on within the compound. Dinin barely had
his hand up to begin the attack command when his sixty anxious drow warriors
jumped up and charged, their faces twisted in
wicked glee and their weapons waving menacingly.
They halted their approach on cue, though, remembering one final task set out to
them. Every drow, noble or commoner, possessed certain magical abilities.
Bringing forth a globe of darkness, as Dinin had done to the bugbears in the
street earlier that night, came easily to even the lowliest of the dark elves. So it
went now, with sixty Do'Urden soldiers blotting out the perimeter of House DeVir
above the mushroom fence in ball after ball of blackness.
For all of their stealth and precautions, House Do'Urden knew that many eyes
were watching the raid. Witnesses were not too much of a problem, they could
not, or would not, care enough to identify the attacking house. But custom and
rules demanded that certain attempts at secrecy be
enacted, the etiquette of drow warfare. In the blink of a red glowing drow eye,
House DeVir became, to the rest of the city, a dark blot on Menzoberranzan's
landscape.
Rizzen came up behind his youngest son. "Well done” he signaled in the intricate
finger language of the drow. Nalfein is in through the back”
"An easy victory” the cocky Dinin signaled back, "if Matron Ginafae and her
clerics are held at bay”
"Trust in Matron Malice” was Rizzen's response. He clapped his son's shoulder
and followed his troops in through the breached mushroom fence.
High above the cluster of House DeVir, Zaknafein rested comfortably in the
current-arms of Briza's aerial servant, watching the drama unfold. From this
vantage, Zak could see within the ring of darkness and could hear within the ring
of magical silence. Dinin's troops, the first drow soldiers in, had met resistance at
every door and were being beaten badly.
Nalfein and his brigade, the troops of House Do'Urden most practiced in the
ways of wizardry, came through the fence at the rear of the complex. Lightning
strikes and magical balls of acid thundered into the courtyard at the base of the
DeVir structures, cutting down Do'Urden fodder and
DeVir defenses alike.
In the front courtyard, Rizzen and Dinin commanded the finest fighters of House
Do'Urden. The blessings of Lloth were with his house, Zak could see when the
battle was fully joined, for the strikes of the soldiers of House Do'Urden came
faster than those of their enemies, and their aim
proved more deadly. In minutes, the battle had been taken fully inside the five
pillars.
Zak stretched the incessant chill out of his arms and willed the aerial servant to
action. Down he plummeted on his windy bed, and then he fell free the last few
feet to the terrace along the top chambers of the central pillar. At once, two
guards, one a female, rushed out to greet him. They hesitated in confusion,
though, trying to sort out the true form of this unremarkable gray blur too long.
They had never heard of Zaknafein Do'Urden. They didn't know that death was
upon them.
Zak's whip flashed out, catching and gashing the female's throat, while his other
hand walked his sword through a series of masterful thrusts and parries that put
the male off balance. Zak finished both in a single, blurring movement, snapping
the whip-entwined female from the terrace with a twist of his wrist and spinning a
kick into the male's face that likewise dropped him to the cavern floor.
Zak was then inside, where another guard rose up to meet him. . . but fell at his
feet.
Zak slipped along the curving wall of the stalactite tower, his cooled body
blending perfectly with the stone. Soldiers of House DeVir rushed all about him,
trying to formulate some defense agenst the host of intruders who had already
won out the lowest level of every structure and had taken two of the pillars
completely.
Zak was not concerned with them. He blocked out the clanging ring of
adamantite weapons, the cries of command, and the screams of death,
concentrating instead on a singular sound that would lead him to his destination:
a unified, frantic chant.
He found an empty corridor covered with spider carvings and running into the
center of the pillar. As in House Do'Urden, this corridor ended in a large set of
ornate double doors, their decorations dominated by arachnid forms. "This must
be the place” Zak muttered under his breath, fitting his hood to the top of his
head.
A giant spider rushed out of its concealment to his side.
Zak dove to his belly and kicked out under the thing, spinning into a roll that
plunged his sword deep into the monster's bulbous body. Sticky fluids gushed out
over the weapon master, and the spider shuddered to a quick death.
"Yes” Zak whispered, wiping the spider juices from his face, "this must be the
place” He pulled the dead monster back into its hidden cubby and slipped in
beside the thing, hoping that no one had noticed the brief struggle.
By the sounds of ringing weapons, Zak could tell that the fighting had almost
reached this floor. House DeVir now seemed to have its defenses in place,
though, and was finally holding its ground.
"Now, Malice” Zak whispered, hoping that Briza, attuned to him in the meld,
would sense his anxiety. "Let us not be late!"
Back in the clerical anteroom of House Do'Urden, Malice and her subordinates
continued their brutal mental assault on the clerics of House DeVir. Lloth heard
their prayers louder than those of their counterparts, giving the clerics of House
Do'Urden the stronger spells in their mental combat. Already they had easily put
their enemies into a defensive posture. One of the lesser priestesses in DeVir's
circle of
eight had been crushed by Briza's mental insinuations and now lay dead on the
floor barely inches from Matron Ginafae's feet.
But the momentum had slowed suddenly and the battle seemed to be swinging
back to an even level. Matron Malice, struggling with the impending birth, could
not hold her concentration, and without her voice, the spells of her unholy circle
weakened.
At her mother's side, powerful Briza clutched her mother's hand so tightly that all
the blood was squeezed from it, leaving it cool-the only cool spot on the laboring
female to the eyes of the others. Briza studied the contractions and the crowning
cap of the coming child's white hair, and calculated the time to the moment of
birth. This technique of translating the pain of birth into an offensive spell attack
had never been tried before, except in legend, and Briza knew that timing would
be the critical factor.
She whispered into her mother's ear, coaxing out the words of a deadly
incantation.
Matron Malice echoed back the beginnings of the spell, sublimating her gasps,
and transforming her rage of agony into offensive power.
"Dinnen douward ma brechen tol” Briza implored.
"Dinnen douward . . . maaa . . . brechen to" Malice growled, so determined to
focus through the pain that she bit through one of her thin lips.
The baby's head appeared, more fully this time, and this time to stay.
Briza trembled and could barely remember the incantation herself. She
whispered the final rune into the matron's ear, almost fearing the consequences.
Malice gathered her breath and her courage. She could feel the tingling of the
spell as clearly as the pain of the birth. To her daughters standing around the
idol, staring at her in disbelief, she appeared as a red blur of heated fury,
streaking sweat lines that shone as brightly as the heat of boiling-water.
"Abec” the matron began, feeling the pressure building to a crescendo. "Abec”
She felt the hot tear of her skin, the sudden slippery release as the baby's head
pushed through, the sudden ecstacy of birthing. "Abec dj'n'a'BREG DOUWARD."
Malice screamed, pushing away all of the agoony in a final explosion of magical
power that knocked even the clerics of her own house from their feet.
Carried on the thrust of Matron Malice's exultation, the dweomer thundered into
the chapel of House DeVir, shattered the gemstone idol of Lloth, sundered the
double doors into heaps of twisted metal, and threw Matron Ginafae and her
overmatched subordinates to the floor.
Zak shook his head in disbelief as the chapel doors flew past him. "Quite a kick,
Malice” He chuckled and spun around the entryway, into the chapel. Using his
infravision, he took a quick survey and head count of the lightless room's seven
living occupants, all struggling back to their feet, their robes tattered. Again
shaking his head at the bared power of Matron Malice, Zak pulled his hood down
over his face.
A snap of his whip was the only explanation he offered as he smashed a tiny
ceramic globe at his feet. The sphere shattered, dropping out a pellet that Briza
had enchanted for just such occasions, a pellet glowing with the brightness of
daylight.
For eyes accustomed to blackness, tuned in to heat emanations, the intrusion of
such radiance came in a blinding flash of agony. The clerics' cries of pain only
aided Zak in his systematic trek around the room, and he smiled widely under his
hood every time he felt his sword bite into drow flesh.
He heard the beginnings of a spell across the way and knew that one of the
DeVirs had recovered enough from the assault to be dangerous. The weapon
master did not need his eyes to aim, however, and the crack of his whip took
Matron Ginafae's tongue right out of her mouth.
Briza placed the newborn on the back of the spider idol and lifted the ceremonial
dagger, pausing to admire its cruel workmanship. Its hilt was a spider's body
sporting eight legs, barbed so as to appear furred, but angled down to serve as
blades. Briza lifted the instrument above the baby's chest. "Name the child” she
implored her mother. "The Spider
Queen will not accept the sacrifice until the child is
named!"
Matron Malice lolled her head, trying to fathom her daughter's meaning. The
matron mother had thrown every thing into the moment of the spell and the birth,
and she was now barely coherent.
"Name the child!" Briza commanded, anxious to feed her
hungry goddess.
"It nears its end” Dinin said to his bl'othel' when they met in a lower hall of one of
the lesser pillars of House DeVir. "Rizzen is winning through to the top, and it is
believed that Zaknafein's dark work has been completed”
"Two score of House DeVir's soldiers have already turned allegiance to us”
Nalfein replied.
"They see the end” laughed Dinin. "One house serves them as well as another,
and in the eyes of commoners no house is worth dying for. Our task will be
finished soon”
"Too quickly for anyone to take note” Nalfein said. "Now Do'Urden, Daermon
N'a'shezbaernon, is the Ninth House of Menzoberranzan, and DeVir be damned!"
"Alert!" Dinin cried suddenly, eyes widening in feigned horror as he looked over
his brother's shoulder.
Nalfein reacted immediately, spinning to face the danger at his back, only to put
the true danger at his back. For even as Nalfein realized the deception, Dinin's
sword slipped into his spine. Dinin put his head to his brother's shoulder and
pressed his cheek to Nalfein's, watching the red sparkle of heat leave his
brother's eyes.
"Tho quickly for anyone to take note” Dinin teased, echoing his brother's earlier
words.
He dropped the lifeless form to his feet. "Now Dinin is elderboy of House
Do'Urden, and Nalfein be damned”
"Drizzt” breathed Matron Malice. "The child's name is Drizzt!"
Briza tightened her grip on the knife and began the ritual. "Queen of Spiders,
take this babe” she began. She raised the dagger to strike. "Drizzt Do'Urden we
give to you in payment for our glorious vic-"
"Wait!" called Maya from the side of the room. Her melding with her brother
Nalfein had abruptly ceased. It could only mean one thing. "Nalfein is dead” she
announced. "The baby is no longer the third living son”
Vierna glanced curiously at her sister. At the same instant that Maya had sensed
Nalfein's death, Vierna, melded with Dinin, had felt a strong emotive surge.
Elation? Vierna brought a slender finger up to her pursed lips, wondering if Dinin
had successfully pulled off the assassination.
Briza still held the spider-shaped knife over the babe's chest, wanting to give this
one to Lloth.
"We promised the Spider Queen the third living son”
Maya warned. "And that has been given”
"But not in sacrifice” argued Briza.
Vierna shrugged, at a loss. "If Lloth accepted Nalfein, then
he has been given. To give another might evoke the Spider
Queen's anger”
"But to not give what we have promised would be worse
still!" Briza insisted.
"Then finish the deed” said Maya.
Briza clenched down tight on the dagger and began theritual again.
"Stay your hand” Matron Malice commanded, propping herself up in the chair.
"Lloth is content, our victory is won. Welcome, then, your brother, the newest
member of House Do'Urden”
"Just a male” Briza commented in obvious disgust, walking away from the idol
and the child.
"Next time we shall do better” Matron Malice chuckled, though she wondered if
there would be a next time. She approached the end of her fifth century of life,
and drow elves, even young ones, were not a particularly fruitful lot. Briza had
been born to Malice at the youthful age of one hundred, but in the almost four
centuries since, Malice had
produced only five other children. Even this baby, Drizzt, had come as a surprise,
and Malice hardly expected that she would ever conceive again.
"Enough of such contemplations” Malice whispered to herself exhausted. "There
will be ample time. . “ She sank back into her chair and fell into fitful, though
wickedly pleasant, dreams of heightening power.
Zaknafein walked through the central pillar of the DeVir complex, his hood in his
hand and his whip and sword comfortably replaced on his belt. Every now and
then a ring of battle sounded, only to be quickly ended. House Do'Urden had
rolled through to victory, the tenth house had taken the fourth, and now all that
remained was to remove evidence
and witnesses. One group of lesser female clerics marched through, tending to
the wounded Do'Urdens and animating the corpses of those beyond their ability,
so that the bodies could walk away from the crime scene. Back at the Do'Urden
compound, those corpses not beyond repair would be resurrected and put back
to work.
Zak turned away with a visible shudder as the clerics moved from room to room,
the marching line of Do'Urden zombies growing ever longer at their backs.
As distasteful as Zaknafein found this troupe, the one that followed was even
worse. The Do'Urden clerics led a contingent of soldiers through the structure,
using detection spells to determine hiding places of surviving DeVirs. One
stopped in the hallway just a few steps from Zak, her eyes turned inward as she
felt the emanations of her spell. She held her fingers out in front of her, tracing a
slow line, like some macabre divining rod, toward drow flesh.
"In there!" she declared, pointing to a panel at the base of the wall. The soldiers
jumped to it like a pack of ravenous wolves and tore through the secret door.
Inside a hidden cubby huddled the children of House DeVir. These were nobles,
not commoners, and could not be taken alive.
Zak quickened his pace to get beyond the scene, but he heard vividly the
children's helpless screams as the hungry Do'Urden soldiers finished their job.
Zak found himself in a run now. He rushed around a bend in the hallway, nearly
bowling over Dinin and Rizzen.
"Nalfein is dead” Rizzen declared impassively. Zak immediately turned a
suspicious eye on the younger Do'Urden son.
"I killed the DeVir soldier who committed the deed” Dillin assured him, not even
hiding his cocky smile.
Zak had been around for nearly four centuries, and he was certainly not ignorant
of the ways of his ambitious race. The brother princes had come in defensively at
the back of the lines, with a host of Do'Urden soldiers between them and the
enemy. By the time they even encountered a drow that was not of their own
house, the majority of the DeVirs' surviving soldiers had already switched
allegiance to House Do'Urden. Zak doubted that either of the Do'Urden brothers
had even seen action against a DeVir.
"The description of the carnage in the prayer room has been spread throughout
the ranks” Rizzen said to the weapon master. "You performed with your usual
excellence as we have come to expect”
Zak shot the patron a glare of contempt and kept on his way, down though the
structure's main doors and out beyond the magical darkness and silence into
Menzoberranzan's dark dawn. Rizzen was Matron Malice's present partner in a
long line of partners, and no more. When Malice was finished with him, she
would either relegate him back to the ranks of the common soldiery, stripping him
of the name Do'Urden and all the rights that accompanied it, or she would
dispose of him. Zak owed him no respect.
Zak moved out beyond the mushroom fence to the highest
vantage point he could find, then fell to the ground. He
watched, amazed, a few moments later, when the procession
of the Do'Urden army, patron and son, soldiers and
clerics, and the slow-moving line of two dozen drow zombies,
made its way back home. They had lost, and left behind,
nearly all of their slave fodder in the attack, but the
line leaving the wreckage of House DeVir was longer than
the line that had come in earlier that night. The slaves had
been replaced twofold by captured DeVir slaves, and fifty,!
or more of the DeVir common troops, showing typical drow
loyalty, had willingly joined the attackers. These traitorous'
draw would be interrogated-magically interrogated-by
the Do'Urden clerics to ensure their sincerity.
They would pass the test to a one, Zak knew. Drow elves
were creatures of survival, not of principle. The soldiers
would be given new identities and would be kept within the
privacy of the Do'Urden compound for a few months, until
the fall of House DeVir became an old and forgotten tale.
Zak did not follow immediately. Rather, he cut through
the rows of mushroom trees and found a secluded dell,
where he plopped down on a patch of mossy carpet and!
raised his gaze to the eternal darkness of the cavern's
ceiling-and the eternal darkness of his existence.
It would have been prudent for him to remain silent at
that time; he was an invader to the most powerful section of
the vast city. He thought of the possible witnesses to his
words, the same dark elves who had watched the fall of
House DeVir, who had wholeheartedly enjoyed the spectacle.
In the face of such behavior and such carnage as this
night had seen, Zak could not contain his emotions. His lament
came out as a plea to some god beyond his experience.
"What place is this that is my world; what dark coil has my
spirit embodied?" he whispered the angry disclaimer that
had always been a part of him. "In light, I see my skin as
black; in darkness, it glows white in the heat of this rage
cannot dismiss.
"Would that I had the courage to depart, this place or this
life, or to stand openly against the wrongness that is the
world of these, my kin. 1b seek an existence that does not
run afoul to that which I believe, and to that which I hold
dear faith is truth.
"Zaknafein Do'Urden, I am called, yet a drow I am not, by
choice or by deed. Let them discover this being that I am,
then. Let them rain their wrath on these old shoulders already
burdened by the hopelessness of Menzoberranzan”
Ignoring the consequences, the weapon master rose to his
feet and yelled, "Menzoberranzan, what hell are you?"
A moment later, when no answer echoed back out of the
quiet city, Zak flexed the remaining chill of Briza's wand
from his weary muscles. He found some comfort as he patted
the whip on his belt-the instrument that had taken the
tongue from the mouth of a matron mother.
Chapter 3
The Eyes of the Child
Masoj, the young apprentice-which at this point in his
magic-using career meant that he was no more than a cleaning
attendant-leaned on his broom and watched as Alton
DeVir moved through the door into the highest chamber of
the spire. Masoj almost felt sympathy for the student, who
had to go in and face the Faceless One.
Masoj felt excitement as well, though, knowing that the
ensuing fireworks between Alton and the faceless master
would be well worth the watching. He went back to his
sweeping, using the broom as an excuse to get farther
around the curve of the room's floor, closer to the door.
"You requested my presence, Master Faceless One” Alton
DeVir said again, keeping one hand in front of his face and
squinting to fight the brilliant glare of the room's three
lighted candles. Alton shifted uncomfortably from one foot
to the other just inside the shadowy room's door.
Hunched across the way, the Faceless One kept his back to
the young DeVir. Better to be done with this cleanly, the
master reminded himself. He knew, though, that the spell
he was now preparing would kill Alton before the student
could learn his family's fate, before the Faceless One could
fully complete Dinin Do'Urden's final instructions. To
much was at stake. Better to be done with this cleanly.
"You. ." Alton began again, but he prudently held his
words and tried to sort out the situation before him. How
unusual to be summoned to the private chambers of a master
of the Academy before the day's lessons had even begun.
When he had first received the summons, Alton feared that
he had somehow failed one of his lessons. That could be a fatal
mistake in Sorcere. Alton was close to graduation, but
the disdain of a single master could put an end to that.
He had done quite well in his lessons with the Faceless
One, had even believed that this mysterious master favored
him. Could this call be simply a courtesy of congratulations
on his impending graduation? Unlikely, Alton realized
against his hopes. Masters of the drow Academy did not often
congratulate students.
Alton then heard quiet chanting and noticed that the master
was in the midst of spellcasting. Something cried out as
very wrong to him now; something about this whole situation
did not fit the strict ways of the Academy. Alton set his
feet firmly and tensed his muscles, following the advice of
the motto that had been drilled into the thoughts of every
student at the Academy, the precept that kept drow elves
alive in a society so devoted to chaos: Be prepared.
The doors exploded before him, showering the room with
stone splinters and throwing Masoj back against the wall.
He felt the show well worth both the inconvenience and the
new bruise on his shoulder when Alton DeVir scrambled
out of the room. The student's back and left arm trailed
wisps of smoke, and the most exquisite expression of terror
and pain that Masoj had ever seen was etched on the DeVir
noble's face.
Alton stumbled to the floor and kicked into a roll, desperate
to put some ground between himself and the murderous
master. He made it down and around the descending
arc of the room's floor and through the door that led into
the next lower chamber just as the Faceless One made his
appearance at the sundered door.
The master stopped to spit a curse at his misfire, and to
consider the best way to replace his door. "Clean it up!" he
snapped at Masoj, who was again leaning casually with his
hands atop his broomstick and his chin atop his hands.
Masoj obediently dropped his head and started sweeping
the stone splinters. He looked up as the Faceless One stalked
past, however, and cautiously started after the master.
Alton couldn't possibly escape, and this show would be
too good to miss.
The third room, the Faceless One's private library, was
the brightest of the four in the spire, with dozens of candles
burning on each wall.
"Damn this light!" Alton spat, stumbling his way down
through the dizzying blur to the door that led to the Faceless
One's entry hall, the lowest room of the master's quarters.
If he could get down from this spire and outside of the
tower to the courtyard of the Academy, he might be able to
turn the momentum against the master.
Alton's world remained the darkness of Menzoberranzan,
but the Faceless One, who had spent so many decades in the
candlelight of Sorcere, had grown accustomed to using his
eyes to see shades of light, not heat.
The entry hall was cluttered with chairs and chests, but
only one candle burned there, and Alton could see clearly
enough to dodge or leap any obstacles. He rushed to the
door and grabbed the heavy latch. It turned easily enough,
but when Alton tried to shoulder through, the door did not
budge and a burst of sparkling blue energy threw him back
to the floor.
"Curse this place” Alton spat. The portal was magically
held. He knew a spell to open such enchanted doors but
doubted whether his magic would be strong enough to dispel
the castings of a master. In his haste and fear, the words
of the dweomer floated through Alton's thoughts in an undecipherable
jumble.
"Do not run, DeVir” came the Faceless One's call from the
previous chamber. "You only lengthen your torment!"
"A curse upon you, too” Alton replied under his breath.
Alton forgot about the stupid spell; it would never come to
him in time. He glanced around the room for an option.
His eyes found something unusual halfway up the side
wall, in an opening between two large cabinets. Alton
scrambled back a few steps to get a better angle but found
himself caught within the range of the candlelight, within
the deceptive field where his eyes registered both heat and
light.
He could only discern that this section of the wall showed
a uniform glow in the heat spectrum and that its hue was
subtly different from the stone of the walls. Another doorway?
Alton could only hope his guess to be right. He rushed
back to the center of the room, stood directly across from
the object, and forced his eyes away from the infrared spectrum,
fully back into the world of light.
As his eyes adjusted, what came into view both startled
and confused the young DeVir. He saw no doorway, nor any
opening with another chamber behind it. What he looked
upon was a reflection of himself, and a portion of the room
he now stood in. Alton had never, in his fifty-five years of
life, witnessed such a spectacle, but he had heard the masters
of Sorcere speak of these devices. It was a mirror.
A movement in the upper doorway of the chamber reminded
Alton that the Faceless One was almost upon him.
He couldn't hesitate to ponder his options. He put his head
down and charged the mirror.
Perhaps it was a teleportation door to another section of
the city, perhaps a simple door to a room beyond. Or perhaps,
Alton dared to imagine in those few desperate seconds,
this was some interplanar gate that would bring him
into a strange and unknown plane of existence!
He felt the tingling excitement of adventure pulling him
on as he neared the wondrous thing-then he felt only the
impact, the shattering glass, and the unyielding stone wall
behind it.
Perhaps it was just a mirror.
"Look at his eyes” Vierna whispered to Maya as they examined
the newest member of House Do'Urden.
Truly the babe's eyes were remarkable. Although the
child had been out of the womb for less than an hour, the
pupils of his orbs darted back and forth inquisitively. While
they showed the expected radiating glow of eyes seeing into
the infrared spectrum, the familiar redness was tinted by a
shade of blue, giving them a violet hue.
"Blind?" wondered Maya. "Perhaps this one will be given
to the Spider Queen still”
Briza looked back to them anxiously. Dark elves did not allow
children showing any physical deficiency to live.
"Not blind” replied Vierna, passing her hand over the
child and casting an angry glare at both of her eager sisters.
"He follows my fingers”
Maya saw that Vierna spoke the truth. She leaned closer
to the babe, studying his face and strange eyes. "What do
you see, Drizzt Do'Urden?" she asked softly, not in an act of
gentleness toward the babe, but so that she would not disturb
her mother, resting in the chair at the head of the spider
idol.
"What do you see that the rest of us cannot?"
Glass crunched under Alton, digging deeper wounds as
he shifted his weight in an effort to rise to his feet. What
would it matter? he thought. "My mirror!" he heard the
Faceless One groan, and he looked up to see the outraged
master towering over him.
How huge he seemed to Alton! How great and powerful,
fully blocking the candlelight from this little alcove between
the cabinets, his form enhanced tenfold to the eyes of the
helpless victim by the mere implications of his presence.
Alton then felt a gooey substance floating down around
him, detached webbing finding a sticky hold on the cabi.
nets, on the wall, and on Alton. The young DeVir tried to
leap up and roll away, but the Faceless One's spell already
held him fast, trapped him as a dirgit fly would be trapped
in the strands of a spider's home.
"First my door” the Faceless One growled at him, "and
now this, my mirror! Do you know the pains I suffered to
acquire such a rare device?"
Alton turned his head from side to side, not in answer, but
to free at least his face from the binding substance.
"Why did you not just stand still and let the deed be finished
cleanly?" the Faceless One roared, thoroughly disgusted.
.
"Why?" Alton lisped, spitting some of the webbing from
his thin lips. "Why would you want to kill me?"
"Because you broke my mirror!" the Faceless One shot
back.
It didn't make any sense, of course-the mirror had only
been shattered after the initial attack-but to the master, Alton
supposed, it didn't have to make sense. Alton knew his
cause to be hopeless, but he continued on in his efforts to
dissuade his opponent.
"You know of my house, of House DeVir” he said, indignant,
"fourth in the city. Matron Ginafae will not be pleased.
A high priestess has ways to learn the truth of such situations!"
"House DeVir?" The Faceless One laughed. Perhaps the
torments that Dinin Do'Urden had requested would be in
line after all. Alton had broken his mirror!
"Fourth house!" Alton spat.
"Foolish youth” the Faceless One cackled. "House DeVir is
no more-not fourth, not fifty-fourth, nothing”
Alton slumped, though the webbing did its best to hold his
body erect. What could the master be babbling about?
"They all are dead” the Faceless One taunted. "Matron
Ginafae sees Lloth more clearly this day” Alton's expression
of horror pleased the disfigured master. "All dead” he
snarled one more time. "Except for poor Alton, who lives on
to hear of his family's misfortune. That oversight shall be
remedied now!" The Faceless One raised his hands to cast a
spell.
"Who?" Alton cried.
The Faceless One paused and seemed not to understand.
"What house did this?" the doomed student clarified. "Or
what conspiracy of houses brought down DeVir?"
"Ah, you should be told” replied the Faceless One, obviously
enjoying the situation. "I suppose it is your right to
know before you join your kin in the realm of death” A
smile widened across the opening where his lips once had
been.
"But you broke my mirror!" the master growled. "Die stupid,
stupid boy! Find your own answers!"
The Faceless One's chest jerked out suddenly, and he
shuddered in convulsions, babbling curses in a tongue far
beyond the terrified student's comprehension. What vile
spell did this disfigured master have prepared for him, so
wretched that its chant sounded in an arcane language foreign
to learned Alton's ears, so unspeakably evil that. its semantics
jerked on the very edge of its caster's control? The
Faceless One then fell forward to the floor and expired.
Stunned, Alton followed the line of the master's hood
down to his back-to the tail of a protruding dart. Alton
watched the poisoned thing as it continued to shudder from
the body's impact, then he turned his scan upward to the
center of the room, where the young cleaning attendant
stood calmly.
"Nice weapon, Faceless One!" Masoj beamed, rolling a
two-handed, crafted crossbow over in his hands. He threw
a wicked smile at Alton and fitted another dart.
Matron Malice hoisted herself out of her chair and willed
herself to her feet. "Out of the way!" she snapped at her
daughters.
Maya and Vierna scooted away from the spider idol and
the baby. "See his eyes, Matron Mother” Vierna dared to remark.
"They are so unusual”
Matron Malice studied the child. Everything seemed in
place, and a good thing, too, for Nalfein, elderboy of House
Do'Urden, was dead, and this boy, Drizzt, would have a difficult
job replacing the valuable son.
"His eyes” Vierna said again.
The matron shot her a venomous look but bent low to see
what the fuss was about.
"Purple?" Malice said, startled. Never had she heard of
such a thing.
"He is not blind” Maya was quick to put in, seeing the disdain
spreading across her mother's face.
"Fetch the candle” Matron Malice ordered. "Let us see
how these eyes appear in the world of light”
Maya and Vierna reflexively headed for the sacred cabinet,
but Briza cut them off. "Only a high priestess may touch
the holy items” she reminded them in a tone that carried
the weight of a threat. She spun around haughtily, reached
into the cabinet, and produced a single half-used red candle.
The clerics hid their eyes and Matron Malice put a prudent
hand over the baby's face as Briza lit the sacred candle. It
produced only a tiny flame, but to drow eyes it came as a
brilliant intrusion.
"Bring it” said Matron Malice after several moments of adjusting.
Briza moved the candle near Drizzt, and Malice
gradually slid her hand away.
"He does not cry” Briza remarked, amazed that the babe
could quietly accept such a stinging light.
"Purple again” whispered the matron, paying no heed to
her daughter's rambling. "In both worlds, the child's eyes
show as purple”
Vierna gasped audibly when she looked again upon her
tiny brother and his striking lavender orbs.
"He is your brother” Matron Malice reminded her, viewing
Vierna's gasp as a hint of what might come. "When he
grows older and those eyes pierce you so, remember, on
your life, that he is your brother”
Vierna turned away, almost blurting a reply she would
have regretted making. Matron Malice's exploits with
nearly every male soldier of the Do'Urden house-and
many others that the seductive matron managed to sneak
away from other houses-were almost legendary in Menzoberranzan.
Who was she to be spouting reminders of prudent
and proper behavior? Vierna bit her lip and hoped that
neither Briza nor Malice had been reading her thoughts at
that moment.
In Menzoberranzan, thinking such gossip about a high
priestess, whether or not it was true, got you painfully executed.
Her mother's eyes narrowed, and Vierna thought she had
been discovered. "He is yours to prepare” Matron Malice
said to her.
"Maya is younger” Vierna dared to protest. "I could attain
the level of high priestess in but a few years if I may keep to
my studies”
"Or never” the matron sternly reminded her. "Thke the
child to the chapel proper. Wean him to words and teach
him all that he will need to know to properly serve as a page
prince of House Do'Urden”
"I will see to him” Briza offered, one hand subconsciously
slipping to her snake-headed whip. "I do so enjoy teaching
males their place in our world”
Malice glared at her. "You are a high priestess. You have
other duties more important than word-weaning a male
child” Then to Vierna, she said, "The babe is yours; do not
disappoint me in this! The lessons you teach Drizzt will reinforce
your own understanding of our ways. This exercise at
'mothering' will aid you in your quest to become a high
priestess” She let Vierna take a moment to view the task in a
more positive light, then her tone became unmistakably
threatening once again. "It may aid you, but it surely can destroy
you!"
Vierna sighed but kept her thoughts silent. The chore that
Matron Malice had dropped on her shoulders would consume
the bulk of her time for at least ten years. Vierna didn't
like the prospects, she and this purple-eyed child together for
ten long years. The alternative, however, the wrath of Matron
Malice Do'Urden, seemed a worse thing by far.
Alton blew another web from his mouth. "You are just e
boy, an apprentice” he stammered. "Why would you-?"
"Kill him?" Masoj finished the thought. "Not to save you, if
that is your hope” He spat down at the Faceless One's body.
"Look at me, a prince of the sixth house, a cleaning steward
for that wretched-"
"Hun'ett” Alton cut in. "House Hun'ett is the sixth house”
The younger drow put a finger to pursed lips. "Wait” he
remarked with a widening smile, an evil smile of sarcasm.
"We are the fifth house now, I suppose, with DeVir wiped
out”
"Not yet!" Alton growled.
"Momentarily” Masoj assured him, fingering the crossbow
quarrel.
Alton slumped even farther back in the web. To be killed
by a master was bad enough, but the indignity of being shot
down by a boy. . . .
"I suppose I should thank you” Masoj said. "I had planned
to kill that one for many weeks”
"Why?" Alton pressed his new assailant. "You would dare
to kill a master of Sorcere simply because your family put
you in servitude to him?"
"Because he would snub me!" Masoj yelled. "Four years I
have slaved for him, that back end of a carrion crawler.
Cleaned his boots. Prepared salve for his disgusting face!
Was it ever enough? Not for that one” He spat at the corpse
again and continued, talking more to himself than to the
trapped student. "Nobles aspiring to wizardry have the advantage
of being trained as apprentices before they reach
the proper age for entry into Sorcere”
"Of course” Alton said. "I myself trained under-"
"He meant to keep me out of Sorcere!" Masoj rambled, ignoring
Alton altogether. "He would have forced me into
Melee-Magthere, the fighters' school, instead. The fighters'
school! My twenty-fifth birthday is only two weeks away”
Masoj looked up, as though he suddenly remembered that
he was not alone in the room.
"I knew I must kill him” he continued, now speaking directly
to Alton. "Then you come along and make it all so convenient.
A student and master killing each other in a fight?
It has happened before. Who would question it? I suppose,
then, that I should thank you, Alton DeVir of No House
Worth Mentioning; Masoj chided with a low, sweeping
bow. "Before I kill you, I mean”
"Wait!" cried Alton. "Kill me to what gain?"
" Alibi”
"But you have your alibi, and we can make it better!"
"Explain; said Masoj, who, admittedly, was in no particular
hurry. The Faceless One was a high-level wizard; the
webs weren't going anywhere anytime soon.
"Free me” Alton said earnestly.
"Can you be as stupid as the Faceless One proclaimed
you?"
Alton took the insult stoically-the kid had the crossbow.
"Free me so that I may assume the Faceless One's identity”
he explained. "The death of a master arouses suspicion, but
if no master is believed dead. . “
"And what of this?" Masoj asked, kicking the corpse.
"Burn it” said Alton, his desperate plan coming fully into
focus. "Let it be Alton DeVir. House DeVir is no more, so
there will be no retaliation, no questions”
Masoj seemed skeptical.
"The Faceless One was practically a hermit” Alton reasoned.
"And I am near to graduation; certainly I can handle
the simple chores of basic teaching after thirty years of
study”
"And what is my gain?"
Alton gawked, nearly burying himself in webbing, as if
the answer were obvious. "A master in Sorcere to call mentor.
One who can ease your way through your years of
study”
" And one who can dispose of a witness at his earliest convenience”
Masoj added slyly.
"And what then would be my gain?" Alton shot back. "To
anger House Hun'ett, fifth in all the city, and I with no family
at my back? No, young Masoj, I am not as stupid as the Faceless
One named me”
Masoj ticked a long and pointed fingernail against his
teeth and considered the possibilities. An ally among the
masters of Sorcere? This held possibilities.
Another thought popped into Masoj's mind, and he pulled
open the cabinet to Alton's side and began rummaging
through the contents. Alton flinched when he heard some
ceramic and glass containers crashing together, thinking of
the components, possibly even completed potions, that
might be lost by the apprentice's carelessness. Perhaps
Melee-Magthere would be a better choice for this one, he
thought.
A moment later, though, the younger drow reappeared,
and Alton remembered that he was in no position to make
such judgments.
"This is mine” Masoj demanded, showing Alton a small
black object: a remarkably detailed onyx figurine of a hunting
panther. "A gift from a denizen of the lower planes for
some help I gave to him”
"You aided such a creature?" Alton had to ask, finding it
difficult to believe that a mere apprentice had the resources
necessary to even survive an encounter with such an unpredictable
and mighty foe.
"The Faceless One-" Masoj kicked the corpse again-
"took the credit and the statue, but they are mine! Everything
else in here will go to you, of course. I know the
magical dweomers of most and will show you what is what”
Brightening at the hope that he would indeed survive this
dreadful day, Alton cared little about the figurine at that
moment. All he wanted was to be freed of the webs so that
he could find out the truth of his house's fate. Then Masoj,
ever a confusing young drow, turned suddenly and started
away.
"Where are you going?" Alton asked.
"To get the acid”
"Acid?" Alton hid his panic well, though he had a terrible
feeling that he understood what Masoj meant to do.
"You want the disguise to appear authentic” Masoj explained
matter-of-factly. "Otherwise, it would not be much
of a disguise. We should take advantage of the web while it
lasts. It will hold you still”
"No” Alton started to protest, but Masoj wheeled on him,
the evil grin wide on his face.
"It does seem a bit of pain, and a lot of trouble to go
through” Masoj admitted. "You have no family and will find
no allies in Sorcere, since the Faceless One was so despised
by the other masters” He brought the crossbow up level
with Alton's eyes and fitted another poisoned dart. "Perhaps
you would prefer death”
"Get the acid!" Alton cried.
"To what end?" Masoj teased, waving the crossbow. "What
have you to live for, Alton DeVir of No House Worth Mentioning'?"
"Revenge” Alton sneered, the sheer wrath of his tone setting
the confident Masoj on his heels. "You have not learned
this yet-though you will, my young student-but nothing
in life gives more purpose than the hunger for revenge!"
Masoj lowered the bow and eyed the trapped drow with
respect, almost fear. Still, the apprentice Hun'ett could not
appreciate the gravity of Alton's proclamation until Alton
reiterated, this time with an eager smile on his face, "Get the
acid”
Chapter 4
Tbe First House
Four cycles of Narbondel-four days-later, a glowing
blue disk floated up the mushroom-lined stone path to the
spider-covered gate of House Do'Urden. The sentries
watched it from the windows of the two outer towers and
from the compound as it hovered patiently three feet off
the ground. Word came to the ruling family only seconds
later.
"What can it be?" Briza asked Zaknafein when she, the
weapon master, Dinin, and Maya assembled on the balcony
of the upper level.
"A summons?" Zak asked as much as answered. "We will
not know until we investigate” Zak stepped up on the railing
and out into the empty air, then levitated down to the
compound floor. Briza motioned to Maya, and the youngest
Do'Urden daughter followed Zak.
"It bears the standard of House Baenre” Zak called up after
he had moved closer. He and Maya opened the large
gates, and the disk slipped in, showing no hostile movements.
"Baenre” Briza repeated over her shoulder, down the
house's corridor to where Matron Malice and Rizzen
waited.
"It seems that you are requested in audience, Matron
Mother” Dinin put in nervously.
Malice moved out to the balcony, and her husband obediently
followed.
"Do they know of our attack?" Briza asked in the silent
code, and every member of House Do'Urden, noble and
commoner alike, shared that unpleasant thought. House
DeVir had been eliminated only a few days before, and a
calling card from the First Matron Mother of Menzoberranzan
could hardly be viewed as a coincidence.
"Every house knows” Malice replied aloud, not believing
the silence to be a necessary precaution within the boundaries
of her own complex. "Is the evidence against us so overwhelming
that the ruling council will be forced to action?"
She stared hard at Briza, her dark eyes alternating between
the red glow of infravision and the deep green they showed
in the aura of normal light. "That is the question we must
ask” Malice stepped up onto the balcony, but Briza grabbed
the back of her heavy black robe to stay her.
"You do not mean to go with the thing?" Briza asked.
Malice's answering look showed even more startlement.
"Of course” she replied. "Matron Baenre would not openly
call upon me if she meant me harm. Even her power is not
so great that she can ignore the tenets of the city”
"You are certain that you will be safe?" Rizzen asked, truly
concerned. If Malice was killed, Briza would take over the
house, and Rizzen doubted that the eldest daughter would
want any male by her side. Even if the vicious female did desire
a patron, Rizzen would not want to be the one in that
position. He was not Briza's father, was not even as old as
Briza. Clearly, the present patron of the house had a lot at
stake in Matron Malice's continued good health.
"Your concern touches me” Malice replied, knowing her
husband's true fears. She pulled out of Briza's grasp and
stepped off the railing, straightening her robes as she
slowly descended. Briza shook her head disdainfully and
motioned Rizzen to follow her back inside the house, not
thinking it wise that the bulk of the family be so exposed to
unfriendly eyes.
"Do you want an escort?" Zak asked as Malice sat on the
disk.
"I am certain that I will find one as soon as I am beyond the
perimeter of our compound” Malice replied. "Matron
Baenre would not risk exposing me to any danger while I
am in the care of her house”
"Agreed” said Zak, "but do you want an escort from
House Do'Urden?"
"If one was wanted, two disks would have floated in” Mal.
ice said in a tone of finality. The matron was beginning to
find the concerns of those around her stifling. She was the
matron mother, after all, the strongest, the oldest, and the
wisest, and did not appreciate others second-guessing her.
To the disk, Malice said, "Execute your appointed task, and
let us be done with it!"
Zak nearly snickered at Malice's choice of words.
"Matron Malice Do'Urden” came a magical voice from the
disk, "Matron Baenre offers her greetings. So long has it
been since last you two have sat in audience”
"Never” Malice signaled to Zak. "Then take me to House
Baenre!" Malice demanded. "I do not wish to waste my time
conversing with a magical mouth!" Apparently, Matron
Baenre had anticipated Malice's impatience, for without an.
other word, the disk floated back out of the Do'Urden com.
pound.
Zak shut the gate as it left, then quickly signaled his sok
diers into motion. Malice did not want any open company,
but the Do'Urden spy network would covertly track every
movement of the Baenre sled, to the very gates of the ruling
house's grand compound.
Malice's guess about an escort was correct. As soon as the
disk swept down from the pathway to the Do'Urden compound,
twenty soldiers of House Baenre, all female, moved
out from concealment along the sides of the boulevard.
They formed a defensive diamond around the guest matron
mother. The guard at each point of the formation wore
black robes emblazoned on the back with a large purpleand-
red spider design-the robes of a high priestess.
"Baenre's own daughters” Malice mused, for only the
daughters of a noble could attain such a rank. How careful
the First Matron Mother had been to ensure Malice's safety
on the trip!
Slaves and drow commoners tripped over themselves in a
frantic effort to get far out of the way of the approaching
entourage as the group made its way through the curving
streets toward the mushroom grove. The soldiers of House
Baenre alone wore their house insignia in open view, and no
one wanted to invoke the anger of Matron Baenre in any
way.
Malice just rolled her eyes in disbelief and hoped that she
might know such power before she died.
She rolled her eyes again a few minutes later, when the
group approached the ruling house. House Baenre encompassed
twenty tall and majestic stalagmites, all interconnected
with gracefully sweeping and arching bridges and
parapets. Magic and faerie fire glowed from a thousand separate
sculptures and a hundred regally adorned guardsmen
paced about in perfect formations.
Even more striking were the inverse structures, the thirty
smaller stalactites of House Baenre. They hung down from
the ceiling of the cavern, their roots lost in the high darkness.
Some of them connected tip-to-tip with the stalagmite
mounds, while others hung freely like poised spears. Ringing
balconies, curving up like the edging of a screw, had
been built along the length of all of these, glowing with an
overabundance of magic and highlighted design.
Magic, too, was the fence that connected the bases of the
outer stalagmites, encircling the whole of the compound. It
was a giant web, silver against the general blue of the rest of
the outer compound. Some said it had been a gift from Lloth
herself, with iron-strong strands as thick as a drow elf's
arm. Anything touching Baenre's fence, even the sharpest
of drow weapons, would simply stick fast until the matron
mother willed the fence to let it free.
Malice and her escorts moved straight toward a symmetrical
and circular section of this fence, between the tallest of
the outer towers. As they neared, the gate spiraled and
wound out, leaving a gap large enough for the caravan to
step through.
Malice sat through it all, trying to appear unimpressed.
Hundreds of curious soldiers watched the procession as it
made its way to the central structure of House Baenre, the
great purple-glowing chapel dome. The common soldiers
left the entourage, leaving only the four high priestesses to:
escort Matron Malice inside.
The sights beyond the great doors to the chapel did not
disappoint her. A central altar dominated the place with a
row of benches spiraling out in several dozen circuits to the
perimeter of the great hall. Several thousand drow could sit
there with room to stretch. Statues and idols too numerous
to count stood all about the place, glowing in a quiet black
light. In the air high above the altar loomed a gigantic glowing
image, a red-and-black illusion that slowly and continually
shifted between the forms of a spider and a beautiful
drow female.
" A work of Gomph, my principal wizard” Matron Baenre
explained from her perch on the altar, guessing that Malice,
like everyone else who ever came to Chapel Baenre, was
awestruck by the sight. "Even wizards have their place”
"As long as they remember their place” Malice replied,
slipping down from the now stationary disk.
"Agreed” said Matron Baenre. "Males can get so presumptuous
at times, especially wizards! Still, I wish that I had
Gomph at my side more often these days. He has been appointed
Archmage of Menzoberranzan, you know, and
seems always at work on Narbondel or some other such
tasks”
Malice just nodded and held her tongue. Of course, she
knew that Baenre's son was the city's chief wizard. Everybody
knew. Everybody knew, too, that Baenre's daughter
Triel was the Matron Mistress of the Academy, a position of
honor in Menzoberranzan second only to the title of matron
mother of an individual family. Malice had little doubt
that Matron Baenre would somehow work that fact into the
conversation before too long.
Before Malice took a step toward the stairs to the altar,
her newest escort stepped out from the shadows. Malice
scowled openly when she saw the thing, a creature known
as an illithid, a mind fIayer. It stood about six feet tall, fully a
foot taller than Malice, most of the difference being the result
of the creature's enormous head. Glistening with slime,
he head resembled an octopus with pupil-less, milky white
eyes.
Malice composed herself quickly. Mind fIayers were not
mknown in Menzoberranzan, and rumors said that one
had befriended Matron Baenre. These creatures, though,
nore intelligent and more evil than even the drow, almost
always inspired shudders of revulsion.
"You may call him Methil” Matron Baenre explained. "His
true name is beyond my pronunciation. He is a friend!'
Before Malice could reply, Baenre added, "Of course,
Methil gives me the advantage in our discussion, and you
are not accustomed to illithids!' Then, as Malice's mouth
drooped open in disbelief, Matron Baenre dismissed the illithid.
"You read my thought” Malice protested. Few could insinuate
themselves through the mental barriers of a high
priestess well enough to read her thoughts, and the practice
was a crime of the highest order in drow society.
"No!" Matron Baenre explained, immediately on the defensive.
"Your pardon, Matron Malice. Methil reads
thoughts, even the thoughts of a high priestess, as easily as
you or I hear words. He communicates telepathically. On
my word, I did not even realize that you had not yet spoken
your thoughts!'
Malice waited to watch the creature depart the great hall,
then walked up the steps to the altar. In spite of her efforts
against the action, she could not help peeking up at the
transforming spider-and-drow image every now and then.
"How fares House Do'Urden?" Matron Baenre asked,
feigning politeness.
"Well enough” replied Malice, more interested at that moment
in studying her counterpart than in conversing. They
were alone atop the altar, though no doubt a dozen or so
clerics wandered through the shadows of the great hall,
keeping a watchful eye on the situation.
Malice had all that she could handle in hiding her contempt
for Matron Baenre. Malice was old, nearly five hundred,
but Matron Baenre was ancient. Her eyes had seen
the rise and fall of a millennium, by some accounts, though
drow rarely lived past their seventh-and certainly not
their eighth-century. While drow normally did not show
their age-Malice was as beautiful and vibrant now as she
had been on her one-hundredth birthday-Matron Baenre
was withered and worn. The wrinkles surrounding her
mouth resembled a spider's web, and she could hardly keep
the heavy lids of her eyes from dropping altogether. Matron
Baenre should be dead, Malice noted, but still she lives.
Matron Baenre, seeming so beyond her time of life, was
pregnant, and due in only a few weeks.
In this aspect, too, Matron Baenre defied the norm of the
dark elves. She had given birth twenty times, twice as often
as any others in Menzoberranzan, and fifteen of those she
bore were female, everyone a high priestess! Three of
Baenre's children were older than Malice!
"How many soldiers do you now command?" Matron
Baenre asked, leaning closer to show her interest.
"Three hundred” Malice replied.
"Oh," mused the withered old drow, pursing a finger to
her lips. "I had heard the count at three-hundred fifty”
Malice grimaced in spite of herself. Baenre was teasing
her, referring to the soldiers House Do'Urden had added in
its raid on House DeVir:
"Three hundred” Malice said again.
"Of course” replied Baenre, resting back.
"And House Baenre holds a thousand?" Malice asked for
no better reason than to keep herself on even terms in the
discussion.
"That has been our number for many years”
Malice wondered again why this old decrepit thing was
still alive. Surely more than one of Baenre's daughters aspired
to the position of matron mother. Why hadn't they
conspired and finished Matron Baenre off? Or why hadn't
any of them, some in the later stages of life, struck out on
their own to form separate houses, as was the norm for noble
daughters when they passed their fifth century? While
they lived under Matron Baenre's rule, their children would
not even be considered nobles but would be relegated to the
ranks of the commoners.
"You have heard of the fate of House DeVir?" Matron
Baenre asked directly, growing as tired of the hesitant small
talk as her counterpart.
"Of what house?" Malice asked pointedly. At this time,
there was no such thing as House DeVir in Menzoberranzan.
By drow reckoning, the house no longer existed; the
house never existed.
Matron Baenre cackled. "Of course” she replied. "You are
matron mother of the ninth house now. That is quite an
honor!'
Malice nodded. "But not as great an honor as matron
mother of the eighth house!'
"Yes” agreed Baenre, "but ninth is only one position away
from a seat on the ruling council!'
"That would be an honor indeed” Malice replied. She was
beginning to understand that Baenre was not simply teasing
her, but was congratulating her as well, and prodding her
on to greater glories. Malice brightened at the thought.
Baenre was in the highest favor of the Spider Queen. If she
was pleased with House Do'Urden's ascension, then so was
Lloth.
"Not as much of an honor as you would believe” said
Baenre. "We are a group of meddling old females, gathering
every so often to find new ways to put our hands into places
they do not belong!'
"The city recognizes your rule!'
"Does it have a choice?" Baenre laughed. "Still, drow business
is better left to the matron mothers of the individual
houses. Lloth would not stand for a presiding council exactjng
anything that even remotely resembled total rule. Do
you not believe that House Baenre would have conquered
all of Menzoberranzan long ago if that was the Spider
Queen's will?"
Malice shifted proudly in her chair, appalled by such arrogant
words.
"Not now, of course” Matron Baenre explained. "The city
is too large for such an action in this age. But long ago, before
you were even born, House Baenre would not have
found such a conquest difficult. But that is not our way.
Lloth encourages diversity. She is pleased that houses stand
to balance each other, ready to fight beside each other in
times of common need” She paused a moment and let a
smile appear on her wrinkled lips. "And ready to pounce
upon any that fall out of her favor”
Another direct reference to House DeVir, Malice noted,
this time directly connected to the Spider Queen's pleasure.
Malice eased out of her angry posture and found the rest of
her discussion-fully two hours long-with Matron Baenre
quite enjoyable.
Still, when she was back on the disk and floating out
through the compound, past the grandest and strongest
house in all of Menzoberranzan, Malice was not smiling. In
the face of such an open display of power, she could not forget
that Matron Baenre's purpose in summoning her had
been twofold: to privately and cryptically congratulate her
on her perfect coup, and to vividly remind her not to get too
ambitious.
Chapter 5
Weaning
For five long years Vierna devoted almost every waking
moment to the care of baby Drizzt. In drow society, this was
not so much a nurturing time as an indoctrinating time. The
child had to learn basic motor and language skills, as did
children of all the intelligent races, but a drow elf also had
to be grilled on the precepts that bound the chaotic society
together.
In the case of a male child such as Drizzt, Vierna spent
hour after endless hour reminding him that he was inferior
to the drow females. Since almost all of this portion of
Drizzt's life was spent in the family chapel, he encountered
no males except during times of communal worship. Even
when all in the house gathered for the unholy ceremonies,
Drizzt remained silent at Vierna's side, with his gaze obediently
on the floor.
When Drizzt was old enough to follow commands,
Vierna's workload lessened. Still, she spent many hours
teaching her younger brother-presently they were working
on the intricate facial, hand, and body movements of the
silent code. Often, though, she just set Drizzt about the
endless task of cleaning the domed chapel. The room was
barely a fifth the size of the great hall in House Baenre, but
it could hold all the dark elves of House Do'Urden with a
hundred seats to spare.
Being a wean-mother was not so bad now, Vierna
thought, but still she wished that she could devote more of
her time to her studies. If Matron Malice had appointed
Maya to the task of rearing the child, Vierna might already
have been ordained as a high priestess. Vierna still had another
five years in her duties with Drizzt; Maya might attain
high priestesshood before her!
Vierna dismissed that possibility. She could not afford to
worry about such problems.She would finish her tenure as
wean-mother in just a few short years. On or around his
tenth birthday, Drizzt would be appointed page prince of
the family and would serve all the household equally. If her
work with Drizzt did not disappoint Matron Malice, Vierna
knew that she would get her due.
"Go up the wall." Vierna instructed. "Tend to that statue."
She pointed to a sculpture of a naked drow female about
twenty feet from the floor. Young Drizzt looked up at it, confused.
He couldn't possibly climb up to the sculpture and
wipe it clean while holding any secure perch. Drizzt knew
the high price of disobedience, though-even of
hesitation-and he reached up, searching for his first handhold.
"Not like that!" Vierna scolded.
"How?" Drizzt dared to ask, for he had no idea of what his
sister was hinting at.
"Will yourself up to the gargoyle” Vierna explained.
Drizzt's small face crinkled in confusion.
"You are a noble of House Do'Urden!" Vierna shouted at
him. "Or at least you will one day earn that distinction. In
your neck-purse you possess the emblem of the house, an
item of considerable magic” Vierna still wasn't certain if
Drizzt was ready for such a task; levitation was a high manifestation
of innate drow magic, certainly more difficult that
limning objects in faerie fire or summoning globes of darkness.
The Do'Urden emblem heightened these innate
powers of drow elves, magic that usually emerged as a
drow matured. Whereas most drow nobles could summon
the magical energy to levitate once every day or so, the nobles
of House Do'Urden, with their insignia tool, could do so
repeatedly.
Normally, Vierna would never have tried this on a male
child younger than ten, but Drizzt had shown her so much
potential in the last couple of years that she saw no harm in
the attempt. "Just put yourself in line with the statue” she
explained, "and will yourself to rise”
Drizzt looked up at the female carving, then lined his feet
just out in front of the thing's angled and delicate face. He
put a hand to his collar, trying to attune himself to the emblem.
He had sensed before that the magic coin possessed
some type of power, but it was only a raw sensation, a
child's intuition. Now that Drizzt had some focus and confirmation
to his suspicions, he clearly felt the vibrations of
magical energy.
A series of deep breaths cleared distracting thoughts
from the young drow's mind. He blocked out the other
sights of the room; all he saw was the statue, the destination.
He felt himself grow lighter, his heels went up, and
then he was on one toe, though he felt no weight upon it.
Drizzt looked over at Vierna, his smile wide in amazement
. . . then he tumbled to a heap.
"Foolish male!" Vierna scolded. "Try again! Try a thousand
times if you must!" She reached for the snake-headed whip
on her belt. "If you fail, . . "
Drizzt looked away from her, cursing himself. His own
elation had caused the spell to falter. He knew that he could
do it now, though, and he was not afraid of being beaten. He
concentrated again on the sculpture and let the magical energy
gather within his body.
Vierna, too, knew that Drizzt would eventually succeed.
His mind was keen, as sharp as any Vierna had ever known,
including those of the other females of House Do'Urden.
The child was stubborn, too; Drizzt would not let the magic
defeat him. She knew he would stand under the sculpture
until he fainted from hunger if need be.
Vierna watched him go through a series of small successes
and failures, the last one dropping Drizzt from a
height of nearly ten feet. Vierna flinched, wondering if he
was seriously hurt. Drizzt, whatever his wounds, did not
even cry out but moved back into position and started concentrating
all over again.
"He is young for that” came a comment from behind
Vierna. She turned in her seat to see Briza standing over
her, a customary scowl on the older sister's face.
"Perhaps” Vierna replied, "but I'll not know until I let him
try"
"Whip him when he fails” Briza suggested, pulling her
cruel six-headed instrument from her belt. She gave the
whip a loving look-as if it were some sort of pet-and let a
snake's head writhe about her neck and face. "Inspiration”
"Put it away” Vierna retorted. "Drizzt is mine to rear, and I
need no help from you!"
"You should watch how you speak to a high priestess,"
Briza warned, and all of the snake heads, extensions of her
thoughts, turned menacingly toward Vierna.
" As Matron Malice will watch how you interfere with my
tasks” Vierna was quick to reply.
Briza put her whip away at the mention of Matron Malice.
"Your tasks” she echoed scornfully. "You are too yielding for
such a chore. Male children must be disciplined; they must ?
be taught their place” Realizing that Vierna's threat held
dire consequences, the older sister turned and left.
Vierna let Briza have the last word. The wean-mother
looked back to Drizzt, still trying to get up to the statue.
"Enough!" she ordered, recognizing that the child was tiring;
he could barely get his feet off the ground.
"I will do it!" Drizzt snapped back at her.
Vierna liked his determination, but not the tone of his reply.
Perhaps there was some truth to Briza's words. Vierna
snapped the snake-headed whip from her belt. A little inspiration
might go a long way.
Vierna sat in the chapel the next day, watching Drizzt
hard at work polishing the s1atue of the naked female. He
had levitated the full twenty feet in his first attempt this day.
Vierna could not help but be disappointed when Drizzt
did not look back to her and smile at the success. She saw
him now, hovering up in the air, his hands a blur as they
worked the brushes. Most vividly of all, though, Vierna saw
the scars on her brother's naked back, the legacy of their
"inspirational" discussion. In the infrared spectrum, the
whip lines showed clearly, trails of warmth where the insulating
layers of skin had been stripped away.
Vierna understood the gain in beating a child, particularly
a male child. Few drow males ever raised a weapon against
a female, unless under the order of some other female.
"How much do we lose?" Vierna wondered aloud. "What
more could one such as Drizzt become?"
When she heard the words spoken aloud, Vierna quickly
brushed the blasphemous thoughts from her mind. She aspired
to become a high priestess of the Spider Queen, Lloth
the Merciless. Such thoughts were not in accord with the
rules of her station. She cast an angry glare on her little
brother, transferring her guilt, and again took out her instrument
of punishment.
She would have to whip Drizzt again this day, for the sacrilegious
thoughts he had inspired within her.
So the relationship continued for another five years, with
Drizzt learning the basic lessons of life in drow society
while endlessly cleaning the chapel of House Do'Urden. Beyond
the supremacy of female drow (a lesson always accentuated
by the wicked snake-headed whip), the most
compelling lessons were those concerning the surface
elves, the faeries. Evil empires often bound themselves in
webs of hate toward fabricated enemies, and none in the
history of the world were better at it than the drow. From
the first day they were able to understand the spoken word,
drow children were taught that whatever was wrong in
their lives could be blamed on the surface elves.
Whenever the fangs of Vierna's whip sliced into Drizzt's
back, he cried out for the death of a faerie. Conditioned hatred
was rarely a rational emotion.
Part 2
The Weapon Master
Empty hours, empty days.
I find that I have few memories of that first period of my -
life, those first sixteen years when I labored as a servant.
Minutes blended into hours, hours into days, and so on, until
the whole of it seemed one long and barren moment. Several
times I managed to sneak out onto the balcony of House
Do'Urden and look out over the magical lights of Menzoberranzan.
On all of those secret journeys, I found myself entranced
by the growing, and then dissipating, heat-light of
Narbondel, the time-clock pillar Looking back on that now,
on those long hours watching the glow of the wizard's fire
slowly walk its way up and then down the pillar; I am
amazed at the emptiness of my early days.
I clearly remember my excitement, tingling excitement,
each time I got out of the house and set myself into position
to observe the pillar Such a simple thing it was, yet so fulfill.
ing compared to the rest of my existence.
Whenever I hear the crack of a whip, another memorymore
a sensation than a memory actually-sends a shiver
through my spine. The shocking jolt and the ensuing numbness
from those snake-headed weapons is not something
that any person would soon forget. They bite under your
skin, sending waves of magical energy through your body,
waves that make your muscles snap and pull beyond their
limits.
Yet I was luckier than most. My sister Vierna was near to
becoming a high priestess when she was assigned the task
of rearing me and was at a period of her life where she possessed
far more energy than such a job required. Perhaps,
then, there was more to those first ten years under her care
than I now recall. Vierna never showed the intense wickedness
of our mother-or, more particularly; of our oldest sister
Briza. Perhaps there were good times in the solitude of
the house chapel, it is possible that Vierna allowed a more
gentle side of herself to show through to her baby brother.
Maybe not. Even though I count Vierna as the kindest of
my sisters, her words drip in the venom of Lloth as surely as
those of any cleric in Menzoberranzan. It seems unlikely
that she would risk her aspirations toward high priestesshood
for the sake of a mere child, a mere male child.
Whether there were indeed joys in those years, obscured
in the unrelenting assault of Menzoberranzan's wickedness,
or whether that earliest period of my life was even
more painful than the years that followed-so painful that
my mind hides the memories-I cannot be certain. For all
my efforts, I cannot remember them.
I have more insight into the next six years, but the most
prominent recollection of the days I spent serving the court
of Matron Malice-aside from the secret trips outside the
house-is the image of my own feet.
A page prince is never allowed to raise his gaze.
-Drizzt Do'Urden
Chapter 6
"Two-Hands"
Drizzt promptly answered the call to his matron mother's
side, not needing the whip Briza used to hurry him along.
How often he had felt the sting of that dreaded weapon!
Drizzt held no thoughts of revenge against his vicious oldest
sister. With all of the conditioning he had received, he
feared the consequences of striking her-or any femalefar
too much to entertain such notions.
"Do you know what this day marks?" Malice asked him as
he arrived at the side of her great throne in the chapel's
darkened anteroom.
"No, Matron Mother” Drizzt answered, unconsciously
keeping his gaze on his toes. A resigned sigh rose in his
throat as he noticed the unending view of his own feet.
There had to be more to life than blank stone and ten wig.
gling toes, he thought.
He slipped one foot out of his low boot and began doodling
on the stone floor. Body heat left discernable tracings in the
infrared spectrum, and Drizzt was quick and agile enough
to complete simple drawings before the initial lines had
cooled.
"Sixteen years” Matron Malice said to him. "You have
breathed the air of Menzoberranzan for sixteen years. An
important period of your life has passed”
Drizzt did not react, did not see any importance or significance
to the declaration. His life was an unending and unchanging
routine. One day, sixteen years, what difference
did it make? If his mother considered important the things
he had been put through since his earliest recollections,
Drizzt shuddered to think of what the next decades might
hold.
He had nearly completed his picture of a roundshouldered
drow-Briza-being bitten on the behind by an
enormous viper.
"Look at me” Matron Malice commanded.
Drizzt felt at a loss. His natural tendency once had been to
look upon a person with whom he was talking, but Briza
had wasted no time in beating that instinct out of him. The
place of a page prince was servitude, and the only eyes a
page prince's were worthy of meeting were those of the
creatures that scurried across the stone floor-except the
eyes of a spider, of course; Drizzt had to avert his gaze
whenever one of the eight-legged things crawled into his vision.
Spiders were too good for the likes of a page prince.
"Look at me” Malice said again, her tone hinting at volatile
impatience. Drizzt had witnessed the explosions before, a
wrath so incredibly vile that it swept aside anything and
everything in its path. Even Briza, so pompous and cruel,
ran for hiding when the matron mother grew angry.
Drizzt forced his gaze up tentatively, scanning his mother's
black robes, using the familiar spider pattern along the
garment's back and sides to judge the angle of his gaze. He
fully expected, as every inch passed, a smack on his head, or
a lashing on his back-Briza was behind him, always with
her snake-headed whip near her anxious hand.
Then he saw her, the mighty Matron Malice Do'Urden,
her heat-sensing eyes flashing red and her face cool, not
flushed with angry heat. Drizzt kept tense, still expecting a
punishing blow.
"Your tenure as page prince is ended” Malice explained.
"You are secondboy of House Do'Urden now and are accorded
all the. . “
Drizzt's gaze unconsciously slipped back to the floor.
"Look at me!" his mother screamed in sudden rage.
Terrified, Drizzt snapped his gaze back to her face, which
now was glowing a hot red. On the edge of his vision he saw
the wavering heat of Malice's swinging hand, though he was
not foolish enough to try to dodge the blow. He was on the
floor then, the side of his face bruised.
Even in the fall, though, Drizzt was alert and wise enough
to keep his gaze locked on to that of Matron Malice.
"No more a servant!" the matron mother roared. "To continue
acting like one would bring disgrace to our family”
She grabbed Drizzt by the throat and dragged him roughly
to his feet.
"If you dishonor House Do'Urden” she promised, her face
an inch from his, "I will put needles into your purple eyes."
Drizzt didn't blink. In the six years since Vierna had relinquished
care of him, putting him into general servitude to
all the family, he had come to know Matron Malice well
enough to understand all of the subtle connotations of her
threats. She was his mother-for whatever that was
worth-but Drizzt did not doubt that she would enjoy stick.
ing needles in his eyes.
"This one is different” Vierna said, "in more than the
shade of his eyes”
"In what way, then?" Zaknafein asked, trying to keep his
curiosity at a professional level. Zak had always liked Vierna
better than the others, but she recently had been ordained
a high priestess, and had since become too eager for her
own good.
Vierna slowed the pace of her gait-the door to the
chapel's antechamber was in sight now. "It is hard to say”
she admitted. "Drizzt is as intelligent as any male child I
have ever known; he could levitate by the age of five. Yet, after
he became the page prince, it took weeks of punishment
to teach him the duty of keeping his gaze to the floor, as if
such a simple act ran unnaturally counter to his constitution”
Zaknafein paused and let Vierna move ahead of him. "Unnatural?"
he whispered under his breath, considering the
implications of Vierna's observations. Unusual, perhaps, for
a drow, but exactly what Zaknafein would expect-and
hope for-from a child of his loins.
He moved behind Vierna into the lightless anteroom. Malice,
as always, sat in her throne at the head of the spider
idol, but all the other chairs in the room had been moved to
the walls, even though the entire family was present. This
was to be a formal meeting, Zak realized, for only the matronmother
was accorded the comfort of a seat.
"Matron Malice” Vierna began in her most reverent voice,
"I present to you Zaknafein, as you requested”
Zak moved up beside Vierna and exchanged nods with
Malice, but he was more intent on the youngest Do'Urden,
standing naked to the waist at the matron mother's side.
Malice held up one hand to silence the others, then motioned
for Briza, holding a house piwafwi, to continue.
An expression of elation brightened Drizzt's childish face
as Briza, chanting through the appropriate incantations,
placed the magical cloak, black and shot with streaks of purple
and red, over his shoulders.
"Greetings, Zaknafein Do'Urden” Drizzt said heartily,
drawing stunned looks from all in the room. Matron Malice
had not granted him privilege to speak; he hadn't even
asked her permission!
"I am Drizzt, secondboy of House Do'Urden, no more the
page prince. I can look at you now-I mean at your eyes and
not your boots. Mother told me so” Drizzt's smile disappeared
when he looked up at the burning scowl of Matron
Malice.
Vierna stood as if turned to stone, her jaw hanging open
and her eyes wide in disbelief.
Zak, too, was amazed, but in a different manner. He
brought a hand up to pinch his lips together, to prevent
them from spreading into a smile that would have inevitably
erupted into belly-shaking laughter. Zak couldn't remember
the last time he had seen the matron mother's face
so very bright!
Briza, in her customary position behind Malice, fumbled
with her whip, too confounded by her young brother's
actions to even know what in the Nine Hells she should do.
That was a first, Zak knew, for Malice's eldest daughter
rarely hesitated when punishment was in order.
At the matron's side, but now prudently a step farther
away, Drizzt quieted and stood perfectly still, biting down
on his bottom lip. Zak could see, though, that the smile remained
in the young drow's eyes. Drizzt's informality and
disrespect of station had been more than an unconscious
slip of the tongue and more than the innocence of inexperience.
The weapon master took a long step forward to deflect
the matron mother's attention from Drizzt. "Secondboy?"
he asked, sounding impressed, both for the sake of Drizzt's
swelling pride and to placate and distract Malice. "Then it is
time for you to train”
Malice let her anger slip away, a rare event. "Only the basics
at your hand, Zaknafein. If Drizzt is to replace Nalfein,
his place at the Academy will be in Sorcere. Thus the bulk of
his preparation will fall upon Rizzen and his knowledge,
limited though it may be, of the magical arts”
"Are you so certain that wizardry is his lot, Matron?" Zak
was quick to ask.
"He appears intelligent” Malice replied. She shot an angry
glare at Drizzt. "At least, some of the time. Vierna reported
great progress with his command of the innate powers. Our
house needs a new wizard” Malice snarled reflexively, reminded
of Matron Baenre's pride in her wizard son, the
Archmage of the city. It had been sixteen years since Malice's
meeting with the First Matron Mother of Menzoberranzan,
but she had never forgotten even the tiniest detail
of that encounter. "Sorcere seems the natural course”
Zak took a flat coin from his neck-purse, flipped it into a
spin, and snatched it out of the air. "Might we see?" he
asked.
"As you will” Malice agreed, not surprised at Zak's desire
to prove her wrong. Zak placed little value in wizardry, preferring
the hilt of a blade to the crystal rod component of a
lightning bolt.
Zak moved to stand before Drizzt and handed him the
coin. "Flip it”
Drizzt shrugged, wondering what this vague conversation
between his mother and the weapon master was all
about. Until now, he had heard nothing of any future profession
being planned for him, or of this place called Sorcere.
With a consenting shrug of his shoulders, he slid the
coin onto his curled index finger and snapped it into the air
with his thumb, easily catching it. He then held it back out to
Zak and gave the weapon master a confused look, as if to
ask what was so important about such an easy task.
Instead of taking the coin, the weapon master pulled another
from his neck-purse. "Try both hands” he said to
Drizzt, handing it to him.
Drizzt shrugged again, and in one easy motion, put the
coins up and caught them.
Zak turned an eye on Matron Malice. Any drow could
have performed that feat, but the ease with which this one
executed the catch was a pleasure to observe. Keeping a sly
eye on the matron, Zak produced two more coins. "Stack
two on each hand and send all four up together” he instructed
Drizzt.
Four coins went up. Four coins were caught. The only
parts of Drizzt's body that had even flinched were his arms.
"Two-hands” Zak said to Malice. "This one is a fighter. He
belongs in Melee-Magthere”
"I have seen wizards perform such feats” Malice retorted,
not pleased by the look of satisfaction on the troublesome
weapon master's face. Zak once had been Malice's proclaimed
husband, and quite often since that distant time she
took him as her lover. His skills and agility were not confined
to the use of weapons. But along with the pleasures
that Zaknafein gave to Malice, sensual skills that had
prompted Malice to spare Zak's life on more than a dozen
occasions, came a multitude of headaches. He was the finest
weapon master in Menzoberranzan, another fact that Malice
could not ignore, but his disdain, even contempt, for the
Spider Queen had often landed House Do'Urden into trouble.
Zak handed two more coins to Drizzt. Now enjoying the
game, Drizzt put them into motion. Six went up. Six came
down, the correct three landing in each hand.
"Two-hands” Zak said more emphatically. Matron Malice
motioned for him to continue, unable to deny the grace of
her youngest son's display.
"Could you do it again?" Zak asked Drizzt.
With each hand working independently, Drizzt soon had
the coins stacked atop his index fingers, ready to flip. Zak
stopped him there and pulled out four more coins, building
each of the piles five high. Zak paused a moment to study
the concentration of the young drow (and also to keep his
hands over the coins and ensure that they were brightened
enough by the warmth of his body heat for Drizzt to properly
see them in their flight).
"Catch them all, Secondboy” he said in all seriousness.
"Catch them all, or you will land in Sorcere, the school of
magic. That is not where you belong!"
Drizzt still had only a vague idea of what Zak was talking
about, but he could tell from the weapon master's intensity
that it must be important. He took a deep breath to steady
himself, then snapped the coins up. He sorted their glow
quickly, discerning each individual item. The first two fell
easily into his hands, but Drizzt saw that the scattering pattern
of the rest would not drop them so readily in line.
Drizzt exploded into action, spinning a complete circle,
his hands an undecipherable blur of motion. Then he
straightened suddenly and stood before Zak. His hands
were in fists at his sides and a grim look lay on his face.
Zak and Matron Malice exchanged glances, neither quite
sure of what had happened.
Drizzt held his fists out to Zak and slowly opened them, a
confident smile widening across his childish face.
Five coins in each hand.
Zak blew a silent whistle. It had taken him, the weapon
master of the house, a dozen tries to complete that maneuver
with ten coins. He walked over to Matron Malice.
"Two-hands” he said a third time. "He is a fighter, and I am
out of coins”
"How many could he do?" Malice breathed, obviously impressed
in spite of herself.
"How many could we stack?" Zaknafein shot back with a
triumphant smile.
Matron Malice chuckled out loud and shook her head. She
had wanted Drizzt to replace Nalfein as the house wizard,
but her stubborn weapon master had, as always, deflected
her course. "Very well, Zaknafein” she said, admitting her
defeat. "The secondboy is a fighter”
Zak nodded and started back to Drizzt.
"Perhaps one day soon to be the weapon master of House
Do'Urden” Matron Malice added to Zak's back. Her sarcasm
stopped Zak short, and he eyed her over his shoulder.
"With this one” Matron Malice continued wryly, wrenching
back the upper hand with her usual lack of shame,
"could we expect anything less?"
Rizzen, the present patron of the family shifted uncomfortably.
He knew, and so did everyone-even the slaves of
House Do'Urden-that Drizzt was not his child.
"Three rooms?" Drizzt asked when he and Zak entered
the large training hall at the southernmost end of the Do'Urden
complex. Balls of multicolored magical light had been
spaced along the length of the high-ceilinged stone room,
basking the entirety in a comfortably dim glow. The hall
had only three doors: one to the east, which led to an outer
chamber that opened onto the balcony of the house; one directly
across from Drizzt, on the south wall, leading into the
last room in the house; and the one from the main hallway
that they had just passed through. Drizzt knew from the
many locks Zak was now fastening behind them that he
wouldn't often be going back that way.
"One room” Zak corrected.
"But two more doors” Drizzt reasoned, looking out across
the room. "With no locks”
"Ah” Zak corrected, "their locks are made of common
sense” Drizzt was beginning to get the picture. "That door”
Zak continued, pointing to the south, "opens into my private
chambers. You do not ever want me to find you in there.
The other one leads to the tactics room, reserved for times
of war. When-if-you ever prove yourself to my satisfaction,
I might invite you to join me there. That day is years
away, so consider this single magnificent hall-" he swept
his arm out in a wide arc-"your home”
Drizzt looked around, not overly thrilled. He had dared to
hope that he had left this kind of treatment behind him with
his page prince days. This setup, though, brought him back
even to before his six years of servitude in the house, back
to that decade when he had been locked away in the family
chapel with Vierna. This room wasn't even as large as the
chapel, and was too tight for the likings of the spirited
young drow. His next question came out as a growl.
"Where do I sleep?"
"Your home” Zak answered matter-of-factly.
"Where do I take meals?"
"Your home”
Drizzt's eyes narrowed to slits and his face flushed in
glowing heat. "Where do I . . “ he began stubbornly, determined
to foil the weapon master's logic.
"Your home” Zak replied in the same measured and
weighted timbre before Drizzt could finish the thought.
Drizzt planted his feet firmly and crossed his arms over
his chest. "It sounds messy” he growled.
"It had better not be” Zak growled back.
"Then what is the purpose?" Drizzt began. "You pull me
away from my mother-"
"You will address her as Matron Malice” Zak warned. "You
will always address her as Matron Malice”
"From my mother-"
Zak's next interruption came not with words but with the
swing of a curled fist.
Drizzt awoke about twenty minutes later.
"First lesson” Zak explained, casually leaning against the
wall a few feet away. "For your own good. You will always
address her as Matron Malice”
Drizzt rolled to his side and tried to prop himself up on his
elbow but found his head reeling as soon as it left the blackrugged
floor. Zak grabbed him and hoisted him up.
"Not as easy as catching coins” the weapon master remarked.
"What?"
"Parrying a blow”
"What blow?"
"Just agree, you stubborn child”
"Secondboy!" Drizzt corrected, his voice again a growl,
and his arms defiantly back over his chest.
Zak's fist curled at his side, a not-tao-subtle point that
Drizzt did not miss. "Do you need another nap?" the
weapon master asked calmly.
"Secondboys can be children” Drizzt wisely conceded.
Zak shook his head in disbelief. This was going to be interesting.
"You may find your time here enjoyable” he said,
leading Drizzt over to a long, thick, and colorfully (though
most of the colors were somber) decorated curtain. "But
only if you can learn some control over that wagging tongue
of yours” A sharp tug sent the curtain floating down, revealing
the most magnificent weapons rack the young drow
(and many older drow as well) had ever seen. Polearms of
many sorts, swords, axes, hammers, and every other kind
of weapon Drizzt could imagine-and a whole bunch he'd
never imagine-sat in an elaborate array.
"Examine them” Zak told him. "lake your time and your
pleasure. Learn which ones sit best in your hands, follow
most obediently the commands of your will. By the time we
have finished, you will know every one of them as a trusted
companion”
Wide-eyed, Drizzt wandered along the rack, viewing the
whole place and the potential of the whole experience in a
completely different light. For his entire young life, sixteen
years, his greatest enemy had been boredom. Now, it appeared,
Drizzt had found weapons to fight that enemy.
Zak headed for the door to his private chamber, thinking
it better that Drizzt be alone in those first awkward moments
of handling new weapons.
The weapon master stopped, though, when he reached
his door and looked back to the young Do'Urden. Drizzt
swung a long and heavy halberd, a polearm more than
twice his height, in a slow arc. For all of Drizzt's attempts to
keep the weapon under control, its momentum spun his
tiny frame right to the ground.
Zak heard himself chuckle, but his laughter only reminded
him of the grim reality of his duty. He would train
Drizzt, as he had trained a thousand young dark elves before
him, to be a warrior, preparing him for the trials of the
Academy and life in dangerous Menzoberranzan. He would
train Drizzt to be a killer.
How against this one's nature that mantle seemed!
thought Zak. Smiles came too easily to Drizzt; the thought of
him running a sword through the heart of another living being
revolted Zaknafein. That was the way of the drow,
though, a way that Zak had been unable to resist for all of
his four centuries of life. Pulling his stare from the spectacle
of Drizzt at play, Zak moved into his chamber and shut the
door.
"Are they all like that?" he asked into his nearly empty
room. "Do all drow children possess such innocence, such
simple, untainted smiles that cannot survive the ugliness of
our world?" Zak started for the small desk to the side of the
room, meaning to lift the darkening shade off the continually
glowing ceramic globe that served as the chamber's
light source. He changed his mind as that image of Drizzt's
delight with the weapons refused to diminish, and he
headed instead for the large bed across from the door.
"Or are you unique, Drizzt Do'Urden?" he continued ashe
fell onto the cushioned bed. "And if you are so different,
what, then, is the cause? The blood, my blood, that courses
through your veins? Or the years you spent with your
wean-mother?"
Zak threw an arm across his eyes and considered the
many questions. Drizzt was different from the norm, he decided
at length, but he didn't know whether he should
thank Vierna-or himself.
After a while, sleep took him. But it brought the weapon
master little comfort. A familiar dream visited him, a vivid
memory that would never fade.
Zaknafein heard again the screams of the children of
House DeVir as the Do'Urden soldiers-soldiers he himself
had trained-slashed at them.
"This one is different!" Zak cried, leaping up from his bed.
He wiped the cold sweat from his face.
"This one is different” He had to believe that.
Chapter 7
Dark Secrets
"Do you truly mean to try?" Masoj asked, his voice condescending
and filled with disbelief.
Alton turned his hideous glare on the student.
"Direct your anger elsewhere, Faceless One” Masoj said,
averting his gaze from his mentor's scarred visage. "I am not
the cause of your frustration. The question was valid”
"For more than a decade, you have been a student of the
magical arts” Alton replied. "Still you fear to explore the
nether world at the side of a master of Sorcere”
"I would have no fear beside a true master” Masoj dared
to whisper.
Alton ignored the comment, as he had with so many others
he had accepted from the apprenticing Hun'ett over the
last sixteen years. Masoj was Alton's only tie to the outside
world, and while Masoj had a powerful family, Alton had
only Masoj.
They moved through the door into the uppermost chamber
of Alton's four-room complex. A single candle burned
there, its light diminished by an abundance of dark-colored
tapestries and the black hue of the room's stone and rugs.
Alton slid onto his stool at the back of the small, circular table,
and placed a heavy book down before him.
"It is a spell better left for clerics” Masoj protested, sitting
down across from the faceless master. "Wizards command
the lower planes; the dead are for the clerics alone”
Alton looked around curiously, then turned a frown up at
Masoj, the master's grotesque features enhanced by the
dancing candlelight. "It seems that I have no cleric at my
call” the Faceless One explained sarcastically. "Would you
rather I try for another denizen of the Nine Hells?"
Masoj rocked back in his chair and shook his head helplessly
and emphatically. Alton had a point. A year before,
the Faceless One had sought answers to his questions by enlisting
the aid of an ice devil. The volatile thing froze the
room until it shone black in the infrared spectrum and
smashed a matron mother's treasure horde worth of alchemical
equipment. If Masoj hadn't summoned his magical
cat to distract the ice devil, neither he nor Alton would have
gotten out of the room alive.
"Very well, then” Masoj said unconvincingly, crossing his
arms in front of him on the table. "Conjure your spirit and
find your answers”
Alton did not miss the involuntary shudder belied by the
ripple in Masoj's robes. He glared at the student for a moment,
then went back to his preparations.
As Alton neared the time of casting/ Masoj's hand instinctively
went into his pocket, to the onyx figurine of the hunting
cat he had acquired on the day Alton had assumed the
Faceless One's identity. The little statue was enchanted with
a powerful dweomer that enabled its possessor to summon
a mighty panther to his side. Masoj had used the cat sparingly,
not yet fully understanding the dweomer's limitations
and potential dangers. "Only in times of need” Masoj reminded
himself quietly when he felt the item in his hand.
Why was it that those times kept occurring when he was
with Alton? the apprentice wondered.
Despite his bravado, this time Alton privately shared Masoj's
trepidation. Spirits of the dead were not as destructive
as denizens of the lower planes, but they could be equally
cruel and subtler in their torments.
Alton needed his answer, though. For more than a decade
and a half he had sought his information through conventional
channels, enquiring of masters and students-in a
roundabout manner, of course-of the details concerning
the fall of House DeVir. Many knew the rumors of that
eventful night; some even detailed the battle methods used
by the victorious house.
None, though, would name that perpetrating house. In
Menzoberranzan, one did not utter anything resembling an
accusation, even if the belief was commonly shared, without
enough undeniable proof to spur the ruling council into
a unified action against the accused. If a house botched a
raid and was discovered, the wrath of all Menzoberranzan
would descend upon it until the family name had been extinguished.
But in the case of a successfully executed attack,
such as the one that felled House DeVir, an accuser was the
one most likely to wind up at the wrong end of a snakeheaded
whip.
Public embarrassment, perhaps more than any guidelines
of honor, turned the wheels of justice in the city of drow.
Alton now sought other means for the solution to his
quest. First he had tried the lower planes, the ice devil, to disastrous
effect. Now Alton had in his possession an item that
could end his frustrations: a tome penned by a wizard of the
surface world. In the drow hierarchy, only the clerics of
Lloth dealt with the realm of the dead, but in other societies,
wizards also dabbled into the spirit world. Alton had found
the book in the library of Sorcere and had managed to
translate enough of it, he believed, to make a spiritual contact.
He wrung his hands together, gingerly opened the book to
the marked page, and scanned the incantation one final
time. "Are you ready?" he asked Masoj.
"No”
Alton ignored the student's unending sarcasm and placed
his hands flat on the table. He slowly sunk into his deepest
meditative trance.
" Fey innad . . “ He paused and cleared his throat at the
slip. Masoj, though he hadn't closely examined the spell, recognized
the mistake.
"Fey innunad de-min. . “ Another pause.
"Lloth be with us” Masoj groaned under his breath.
Alton's eyes popped wide, and he glared at the student. " A
translation” he growled. "From the strange language of a
human wizard!"
"Gibberish” Masoj retorted.
"I have in front of me the private spellbook of a wizard
from the surface world” Alton said evenly. "An archmage,
according to the scribbling of the orcan thief who stole it
and sold it to our agents” He composed himself again and
shook his hairless head, trying to return to the depths of his
trance.
"A simple, stupid orc managed to steal a spellbook from an
archmage” Masoj whispered rhetorically, letting the absurdity
of the statement speak for itself.
"The wizard was dead!" Alton roared. "The book is authentic!
"
"Who translated it?" Masoj replied calmly.
Alton refused to listen to any more arguments. Ignoring
the smug look on Masoj's face, he began again.
"Fey mnunad de-mill de-sui de-kef”
Masoj faded out and tried to rehearse a lesson from one of
his classes, hoping that his sobs of laughter wouldn't disturb
Alton. He didn't believe for a moment that Alton's attempt
would prove successful, but he didn't want to screw up the
fool's line of babbling again and have to suffer through the
ridiculous incantation all the way from the beginning still
another time.
A short time later, when Masoj heard Alton's excited whisper,
"Matron Ginafae?" he quickly focused his attention
back on the events at hand.
Sure enough, an unusual ball of green-hued smoke appeared
over the candle's flame and gradually took a more
definite shape.
"Matron Ginafae!" Alton gasped again when the summons
was complete. Hovering before him was the unmistakable
image of his dead mother's face.
The spirit scanned the room, confused. "Who are you?" it
asked at length.
"I am Alton. Alton DeVir, your son”
"Son?" the spirit asked.
"Your child”
"I remember no child so very ugly”
"A disguise” Alton replied quickly, looking back at Masoi
and expecting a snicker. If Masoi had chided and doubted
Alton before, he now showed only sincere respect.
Smiling, Alton continued, "Just a disguise, that I might
move about in the city and exact revenge upon our enemies!"
"What city?"
"Menzoberranzan, of course”
Still the spirit seemed not to understand.
"You are Ginafae?" Alton pressed. "Matron Ginafae
DeVir?"
The spirit's features contorted into a twisted scowl as it
considered the question. "I was. . . I think”
"Matron Mother of House DeVir, Fourth House of Menzoberranzan”
Alton prompted, growing more excited. "High
priestess of Lloth”
The mention of the Spider Queen sent a spark through
the spirit.. "Oh, no!" it balked. Ginafae remembered now.
"You should not have done this, my ugly son!"
"It is iust a disguise” Alton interrupted.
"I must leave you” Ginafae's spirit continued, glancing
around nervously. "You must release me!"
"But I need some information from you, Matron Ginafae”
"Do not call me that!" the spirit shrieked. "You do not understand!
I am not in Lloth's favor. . . “
"'ll'ouble” whispered Masoi offhandedly, hardly surprised.
"Just one answer!" Alton demanded, refusing to let another
opportunity to learn his enemies' identities slip past
him.
"Quickly!" the spirit shrieked.
"Name the house that destroyed DeVir”
"The house?" Ginafae pondered. "Yes, I remember that
evil night. It was House-"
The ball of smoke puffed and bent out of shape, twisting
Ginafae's image and sending her next words out as an undecipherable
blurb.
Alton leaped to his feet. "No!" he screamed. "You must tell
me! Who are my enemies?"
"Would you count me as one?" the spirit image said in a
voice very different from the one it had used earlier, a tone
of sheer power that stole the blood from Alton's face. The
image twisted and transformed, became something ugly,
uglier than Alton. Hideous beyond all experience on the Material
Plane.
Alton was not a cleric, of course, and he had never studied
the drow religion beyond the basic tenets taught to
males of the race. He knew the creature now hovering in
the air before him, though, for it appeared as an oozing,
slimy stick of melted wax: a yochlol, a handmaiden of Lloth.
"You dare to disturb the torment of Ginafae?" the yochlol
snarled.
"Damn!" whispered Masoj, sliding slowly down under the
black tablecloth. Even he, with all of his doubts of Alton,
had not expected his disfigured mentor to land them in
trouble this serious.
"But. . “ Alton stuttered.
"Never again disturb this plane, feeble wizard!" the yochlol
roared.
"I did not try for the Abyss” Alton protested meekly. "I
only meant to speak with-"
"With Ginafae!" the yochlol snarled. "Fallen priestess of
Lloth. Where would you expect to find her spirit, foolish
male? Frolicking in Olympus, with the false gods of the surface
elves?"
"I did not think. . “
"Do you ever?" the yochlol growled.
"Nope” Masoj answered silently, careful to keep himself as
far out of the way as possible.
"Never again disturb this plane” the yochlol warned a final
time. "The Spider Queen is not merciful and has no tolerance
for meddling males!" The creature's oozing face
puffed and swelled, expanding beyond the limits of the
smoky ball. Alton heard gurgling, gagging noises, and he
stumbled back over his stool, putting his back flat against
the wall and bringing his arms up defensively in front of his
face.
The yochlol's mouth opened impossibly wide and spewed
forth a hail of small objects. They ricocheted off Alton and
tapped against the wall all around him. Stones? the faceless
wizard wondered in confusion. One of the objects then answered
his unspoken question. It caught hold of Alton's layered
black robes and began crawling up toward his exposed
neck. Spiders.
A wave of the eight-legged beasts rushed under the little
table, sending Masoj tumbling out the other side in a desperate
roll. He scrambled to his feet and turned back, to see Alton
slapping and stomping wildly, trying to get out of the
main host of the crawling things.
"Do not kill them!" Masoj screamed. "To kill spiders is forbidden
by the-"
"To the Nine Hells with the clerics and their laws!" Alton
shrieked back.
Masoj shrugged in helpless agreement, reached around
under the folds of his own robes, and produced the same
two-handed crossbow he had used to kill the Faceless One
those years ago. He considered the powerful weapon and
the tiny spiders scrambling around the room.
"Overkill?" he asked aloud. Hearing no answer, he
shrugged again and fired.
The heavy bolt knifed across Alton's shoulder, cutting a
deep line. The wizard stared in disbelief, then turned an
ugly grimace on Masoj.
"You had one on your shoulder” the student explained.
Alton's scowl did not relent.
"Ungrateful?" Masoj snarled. "Foolish Alton, all of the spiders
are on your side of the room. Remember?" Masoj
turned to leave and called, "Good hunting” over his shoulder.
He reached for the handle to the door, but as his long
fingers closed around it, the portal's surface transformed
into the image of Matron Ginafae. She smiled widely, too
widely, and an impossibly long and wet tongue reached out
and licked Masoj across the face.
" Alton!" he cried, spinning back against the wall out of the
slimy member's reach. He noticed the wizard in the midst of
spellcasting, Alton fighting to hold his concentration as a
host of spiders continued their hungry ascent up his flowing
robes.
"You are a dead one” Masoj commented matter-of-factly,
shaking his head.
Alton fought through the exacting ritual of the spell, ignored
his own revulsion of the crawling things, and forced
the evocation to completion. In all of his years of study, Alton
never would have believed he could do such a thing; he
would have laughed at the mere mention of it. Now, however,
it seemed a far preferable fate to the yochlol's creeping
doom.
He dropped a fireball at his own feet.
Naked and hairless, Masoj stumbled through the door and
out of the inferno. The flaming faceless master came next,
diving into a roll and stripping his tattered and burning
robe from his back as he went.
As he watched Alton patting out the last of the flames, a
pleasant memory flashed in Masoi's mind, and he uttered
the single lament that dominated his every thought at this
disastrous moment.
"I should have killed him when I had him in the web”
A short time later, after Masoj had gone back to his room
and his studies, Alton slipped on the ornamental metallic
bracers that identified him as a master of the Academy and
slipped outside the structure of Sorcere. He moved to the
wide and sweeping stairway leading down from Tier
Breche and sat down to take in the sights of Menzoberranzan.
Even with this view, though, the city did little to distract
Alton from thoughts of his latest failure. For sixteen years
he had forsaken all other dreams and ambitions in his desperate
search to find the guilty house. For sixteen years he
had failed.
He wondered how long he could keep up the charade, and
his spirits. Masoj, his only friend-if Masoj could be called a
friend-was more than halfway through his studies at Sorcere.
What would Alton do when Masoj graduated and returned
to House Hun'ett?
"Perhaps I shall carry on my toils for centuries to come”
he said aloud, "only to be murdered by a desperate student,
as I-as Masoj-murdered the Faceless One. Might that student
disfigure himself and take my place?" Alton couldn't
stop the ironic chuckle that passed his lipless mouth at the
notion of a perpetual "faceless master" of Sorcere. At what
point would the Matron Mistress of the Academy get suspicious?
A thousand years? Ten thousand? Or might the Faceless
One outlive Menzoberranzan itself? Life as a master
was not such a bad lot, Alton supposed. Many drow would
sacrifice much to be given such an honor.
Alton dropped his face into the crook of his elbow and
forced away such ridiculous thoughts. He was not a real
master, nor did the stolen position bring him any measure
of satisfaction. Perhaps Masoj should have shot him that
day, sixteen years ago, when Alton was trapped in the Faceless
One's web.
Alton's despair only deepened when he considered the actual
time frame involved. He had just passed his seventieth
birthday and was still young by drow standards. The notion
that only a tenth of his life was behind him was not a comforting
one to Alton DeVir this night.
"How long will I survive?" he asked himself. "How long until
this madness that is my existence consumes me?" Alton
looked back out over the city. "Better that the Faceless One
had killed me” he whispered. "For now I am Alton of No
House Worth Mentioning”
Masoj had dubbed him that on the first morning after
House DeVir's fall, but way back then, with his life teetering
on the edge of a crossbow, Alton had not understood the title's
implications. Menzoberranzan was nothing more than
a collection of individual houses. A rogue commoner might
latch on to one of them to call his own, but a rogue noble
wouldn't likely be accepted by any house in the city. He was
left with Sorcere and nothing more. . . until his true identity
was discovered at last. What punishments would he then
face for the crime of killing a master? Masoj may have committed
the crime, but Masoj had a house to defend him. Alton
was only a rogue noble.
He sat back on his elbows and watched the rising heatlight
of Narbondel. As the minutes became hours, Alton's
despair and self-pity went through inevitable change. He
turned his attention to the individual drow houses now, not
to the conglomeration that bound them as a city, and he
wondered what dark secrets each harbored. One of them,
Alton reminded himself, held the secret he most dearly
wanted to know. One of them had wiped out House DeVir.
Forgotten was the night's failure with Matron Ginafae and
the yochlol, forgotten was the lament for an early death.
Sixteen years was not so long a time, Alton decided. He had
perhaps seven centuries of life left within his slender frame.
If he had to, Alton was prepared to spend every minute of
those long years searching for the perpetrating house.
"Vengeance” he growled aloud, needing, feeding off, that
audible reminder of his only reason for continuing to draw
breath.
Chapter 8
Kindred
Zak pressed in with a series of low thrusts. Drizzt tried to
back away quickly and return to even footing, but the relentless
assault followed his every step, and he was forced
to keep his movements solely on the defensive. More often
than not, Drizzt found the hilts of his weapons closer to Zak
than the blades.
Zak then dropped into a low crouch and came up under
Drizzt's defense.
Drizzt twirled his scimitars in a masterful cross, but he
had to straighten stiffly to dodge the weapon master's
equally deft assault. Drizzt knew that he had been set up,
and he fully expected the next attack as Zak shifted his
weight to his back leg and dove in, both sword tips aimed
for Drizzt's loins.
Drizzt spat a silent curse and spun his scimitars into a
downward cross, meaning to use the "V" of his blades to
catch his teacher's swords. On a sudden impulse, Drizzt
hesitated as he intercepted Zak's weapons, and he jumped
away instead, taking a painful slap on the inside of one
thigh. Disgusted, he threw both of his scimitars to the floor.
Zak, too, leaped back. He held his swords out to his sides,
a look of sincere confusion on his face. "You should not have
missed that move” he said bluntly.
"The parry is wrong” Drizzt replied.
Awaiting further explanation, Zak lowered one sword tip
to the floor and leaned on the weapon. In past years, Zak
had wounded, even killed, students for such blatant defiance.
"The cross-down defeats the attack, but to what gain?"
Drizzt continued. "When the move is completed, my sword
tips remain down too low for any effective attack routine,
and you are able to slip back and free”
"But you have defeated my attack”
"Only to face another; Drizzt argued. "The best position I
can hope to obtain from the cross-down is an even stance”
"Yes. . “ Zak prompted, not understanding his student's
problem with that scenario.
"Remember your own lesson!" Drizzt shouted. "'Every
move should bring an advantage: you preach to me, but I
see no advantage in using the cross-down”
"You recite only one part of that lesson for your own purpose”
Zak scolded, now growing equally angry. "Complete
the phrase, or use it not at all! 'Every move should bring an
advantage or take away a disadvantage: The cross-down defeats
the double thrust low, and your opponent obviously
has gained the advantage if he even attempts such a daring
offensive maneuver! Returning to an even stance is far preferable
at that moment”
"The parry is wrong!" Drizzt said stubbornly.
"Pick up your blades” Zak growled at him, taking a threatening
step forward. Drizzt hesitated and Zak charged, his
swords leading.
Drizzt dropped to a crouch, snatched up the scimitars,
and rose to meet the assault while wondering if it was another
lesson or a true attack.
The weapon master pressed furiously, snapping off cut
after cut and backing Drizzt around in circles. Drizzt de.
fended well enough and began to notice an all-too-familiar
pattern as Zak's attacks came consistently lower, again forcing
the hilts of Drizzt's weapons up and out over the scimitars'
blades.
Drizzt understood that Zak meant to prove his point with
actions, not words. Seeing the fury on Zak's face, though,
Drizzt wasn't certain how far the weapon master would
carry his point. If Zak proved correct in his observations,
would he strike again to Drizzt's thigh? Or to his heart? Zak
came up and under and Drizzt stiffened and straightened.
"Double thrust low" the weapon master growled, and his
swords dove in.
Drizzt was ready for him. He executed the cross-down,
smiling smugly at the ring of metal as his scimitars crossed
over the thrusting swords. Drizzt then followed through
with only one of his blades, thinking he could deflect both of
Zak's swords well enough in that manner. Now with one
blade free of the parry, Drizzt spun it over in a devious
counter.
As soon as Drizzt reversed the one hand, Zak saw the
ploy-a ruse he had suspected Drizzt would try. Zak
dropped one of his own sword tips-the one nearest to the
hilt of Drizzt's single parrying blade-to the ground, and
Drizzt, trying to maintain an even resistance and balance
along the length of the blocking scimitar, lost his balance.
Drizzt was quick enough to catch himself before he had
stumbled too far, though his knuckles pinched into the
stone of the floor. He still believed that he had Zak caught in
his trap, and that he could finish his brilliant counter. He
took a short step forward to regain his full balance.
The weapon master dropped straight down to the floor,
under the arc of Drizzt's swinging scimitar, and spun a single
circuit, driving his booted heel into the back of Drizzt's
exposed knee. Before Drizzt had even realized the attack,
he found himself lying flat on his back.
Zak abruptly broke his own momentum and threw his
feet back under him. Before Drizzt could begin to under.
stand the dizzying counter-counter, he found the weapon
master standing over him with the tip of Zak's sword pain.
fully and pointedly drawing a tiny drop of blood from his
throat.
"Have you anything more to say?" Zak growled.
"The parry is wrong” Drizzt answered.
Zak's laughter erupted from his belly. He threw his sword
jto the ground, reached down, and pulled the stubborn
young student to his feet. He calmed quickly, his gaze find.
ing that of Drizzt's lavender orbs as he pushed the student
out to arm's length. Zak marveled at the ease of Drizzt's
stance, the way he held the twin scimitars almost as if they
were a natural extension of his arms. Drizzt had been in
training only a few months, but already he had mastered
the use of nearly every weapon in the vast armory of House
Do'Urden.
Those scimitars! Drizzt's chosen weapons, with curving
blades that enhanced the dizzying flow of the young fighter's
sweeping battle style. With those scimitars in hand, this
young drow, barely more than a child, could outfight half
the members of the Academy, and a shiver tingled through
Zak's spine when he pondered just how magnificent Drizzt
would become after years of training.
It was not just the physical abilities and potential of Drizzt
Do'Urden that made Zaknafein pause and take note, however.
Zak had come to realize that Drizzt's temperament
was indeed different from that of the average drow; Drizzt
possessed a spirit of innocence and lacked any maliciousness.
Zak couldn't help but feel proud when he looked upon
Drizzt. In all manners, the young drow held to the same
principles-morals so unusual in Menzoberranzan-as Zak.
Drizzt had recognized the connection as well, though he
had no idea of how unique his and Zak's shared perceptions
were in the evil drow world. He realized that "Uncle Zak"
was different from any of the other dark elves he had come
to know, though that included only his own family and a
few dozen of the house soldiers. Certainly Zak was much
different from Briza, Drizzt's oldest sister, with her zealous,
almost blind, ambitions in the mysterious religion of Lloth.
Certainly Zak was different from Matron Malice, Drizzt's
mother, who seemed never to say anything at all to Drizzt
unless it was a command for service.
Zak was able to smile at situations that didn't necessarily
bring pain to anyone. He was the firstdrow Drizzt had met
who was apparently content with his station in life. Zak was
the first drow Drizzt had ever heard laugh.
"A good try” the weapon master conceded of Drizzt's
failed counter.
"In a real battle, I would have been dead” Drizzt replied.
"Surely” said Zak, "but that is why we train. Your plan was
masterful, your timing perfect. Only the situation was
wrong. Still, I will say it was a good try!'
"You expected it” said the student.
Zak smiled and nodded. "That is, perhaps, because I had
seen the maneuver attempted by another student!'
"Against you?" Drizzt asked, feeling a little less special
now that he knew his battle insights were not so unique.
"Hardly” Zak replied with a wink. "I watched the counter
fail from the same angle as you, to the same result!'
Drizzt's face brightened again. "We think alike” he commented.
"We do” said Zak, "but my knowledge has been increased
by four centuries of experience, while you have not even
lived through a score of years. Trust me, my eager student.
The cross-down is the correct parry!'
"Perhaps” Drizzt replied.
Zak hid a smile. "When you find a better counter, we shall
try it. But until then, trust my word. I have trained more soldiers
than I can count, all the army of House Do'Urden and
ten times that number when I served as a master in Melee-
Magthere. I taught Rizzen, all of your sisters, and both of
your brothers!'
"Both?"
"I . . Zak paused and shot a curious glance at Drizzt. "I
see” he said after a moment. "They never bothered to tell
you!' Zak wondered if it was his place to tell Drizzt the
truth. He doubted that Matron Malice would care either
way; she probably hadn't told Drizzt simply because she
hadn't considered the story of Nalfein's death worth telling.
"Yes, both!' Zak decided to explain. "You had two brothers
when you were born: Dinin, whom you know, and an older
one, Nalfein, a wizard of considerable power. Nalfein was
killed in battle on the very night you drew your first
breath!'
" Against dwarves or vicious gnomes?" Drizzt squeaked, as
wide-eyed as a child begging for a frightening bedtime
story. "Was he defending the city from evil conquerors or
rogue monsters?"
Zak had a hard time reconciling the warped perceptions
of Drizzt's innocent beliefs. "Bury the young in lies” he lamented
under his breath, but to Drizzt he answered, "No”
"Then against some opponent more foul?" Drizzt pressed.
"Wicked elves from the surface?"
"He died at the hands of a drow!" Zak snapped in frustration,
stealing the eagerness from Drizzt's shining eyes.
Drizzt slumped back to consider the possibilities, and Zak
could hardly bear to watch the confusion that twisted his
young face.
"War with another city?" Drizzt asked somberly. "I did not
know.. “
Zak let it go at that. He turned and moved silently toward
his private chamber. Let Malice or one of her lackeys destroy
Drizzt's innocent logic. Behind him, Drizzt held his
next line of questions in check, understanding that the conversation,
and the lesson, was at an end. Understanding,
too, that something important had just transpired.
The weapon master battled Drizzt through long hours as
the days blended into weeks, and the weeks into months.
Time became unimportant; they fought until exhaustion
overwhelmed them, and went back to the training floor
again as soon as they were able.
By the third year, at the age of nineteen, Drizzt was able to
hold out for hours against the weapon master, even taking
the offensive in many of their contests.
Zak enjoyed these days. For the first time in many years,
he had met one with the potential to become his fighting
equal. For the first time that Zak could ever remember,
laughter often accompanied the clash of adamantite weapons
in the training room.
He watched Drizzt grow tall and straight, attentive, eager,
and intelligent. The masters of the Academy would be hard
put just to hold a stalemate against Drizzt, even in his first
year!
That thought thrilled the weapon master only as long as it
took him to remember the principles of the Academy, the
precepts of drow life, and what they would do to his wonderful
student. How they would steal that smile from
Drizzt's lavender eyes.
A pointed reminder of that drow world outside the practice
room visited them one day in the person of Matron Malice.
"Address her with proper respect” Zak warned Drizzt
when Maya announced the matron mother's entrance. The
weapon master prudently moved out a few steps to greet
the head of House Do'Urden privately.
"My greetings, Matron” he said with a low bow. "To what
do i owe the honor of your presence?"
Matron Malice laughed at him, seeing through his facade.
"So much time do you and my son spend in here” she said. "I
came to witness the benefit to the boy”
"He is a fine fighter” Zak assured her.
"He will have to be” Malice muttered. "He goes to the
Academy in only a year”
Zak narrowed his eyes at her doubting words and
growled, "The Academy has never seen a finer swordsman”
The matron walked away from him to stand before
Drizzt. "I doubt not your prowess with the blade” she said
to Drizzt, though she shot a sly gaze back at Zak as she
spoke the words. "You have the proper blood. There are
other qualities that make up a drow warrior-qualities of
the heart. The attitude of a warrior!"
Drizzt didn't know how to respond to her. He had seen
her only a few times in all of the last three years, and they
had exchanged no words.
Zak saw the confusion on Drizzt's face and feared that the
boy would slip up-precisely what Matron Malice wanted.
Then Malice would have an excuse to pull Drizzt out of
Zak's tutelage-dishonoring Zak in the process-and give
him over to Dinin or some other passionless killer. Zak may
have been the finest instructor with the blade, but now that
Drizzt had learned the use of weapons, Malice wanted him
emotionally hardened.
Zak couldn't risk it; he valued his time with young Drizzt
too much. He pulled his swords from their jeweled scabbards
and charged right by Matron Malice, yelling, "Show
her, young warrior!"
Drizzt's eyes became burning flames at the approach of
his wild instructor. His scimitars came into his hands as
quickly as if he had willed them to appear.
It was a good thing they had! Zak came in on Drizzt with a
fury that the young drow had never before seen, more so
even than the time Zak had shown Drizzt the value of the
cross-down parry. Sparks flew as sword rang against scimitar,
and Drizzt found himself driven back, both of his arms
already aching from the thudding force of the heavy blows.
"What are you. . “ Drizzt tried to ask.
"Show her” Zak growled, slamming in again and again.
Drizzt barely dodged one cut that surely would have
killed him. Still, confusion kept his moves purely defensive.
Zak slapped one of Drizzt's scimitars, then the other, out
wide, and used an unexpected weapon, bringing his foot
straight up in front of him and slamming his heel into
Drizzt's nose.
Drizzt heard the crackle of cartilage and felt the warmth
of his own blood running freely down his face. He dove
back into a roll, trying to keep a safe distance from his
crazed opponent until he could realign his senses.
From his knees he saw Zak;a short distance away and approaching.
"Show her!" Zak growled angrily with every determined
step.
The purple flames of faerie fire limned Drizzt's skin, making
him an easier target. He responded the only way he
could; he dropped a globe of darkness over himself and Zak.
Sensing the weapon master's next move, Drizzt dropped to
his belly and scrambled out, keeping his head low-a wise
choice.
At his first realization of the darkness, Zak had quickly
levitated up about ten feet and rolled right over, sweeping
his blades down to Drizzt's face level.
When Drizzt came clear of the other side of the darkened
globe, he looked back and saw only the lower half of Zak's
legs. He didn't need to watch anything more to understand
the weapon master's deadly blind attacks. Zak would have
cut him apart if he had not dropped low in the blackness.
Anger replaced confusion. When Zak dropped from his
magical perch and came rushing back out the front of the
globe, Drizzt let his rage lead him back into the fight. He
spun a pirouette just before he reached Zak, his lead scimi.
tar cutting a gracefully arcing line and his other following in
a deceptively sharp stab straight over that line.
Zak dodged the thrusting point and put a backhand block
on the other.
Drizzt wasn't finished. He set his thrusting blade into a se.
ries of short, wicked pokes that kept Zak on the retreat for a
dozen steps and more, back into the conjured darkness.
They now had to rely on their incredibly keen sense of hear.
ing and their instincts. Zak finally managed to regain afoot.
hold, but Drizzt immediately set his own feet into action,
kicking away whenever the balance of his swinging blades
allowed for it. One foot even slipped through Zak's de.
fenses, blasting the breath from the weapon master's lungs.
They came back out the side of the globe, and Zak, too,
glowed in the outline of faerie fire. The weapon master felt
sickened by the hatred etched on his young student's face,
but he realized that this time, neither he nor Drizzt had
been given a choice in the matter. This fight had to be ugly,
had to be real. Gradually, Zak settled into an easy rhythm,
solely defensive, and let Drizzt, in his explosive fury, wear
himself down.
Drizzt played on and on, relentless and tireless. Zak
coaxed him by letting him see openings where there were
none, and Drizzt was always quick to oblige, launching a
thrust, cut, or kick.
Matron Malice watched the spectacle silently. She
couldn't deny the measure of training Zak had given her
son; Drizzt was-physically-more than ready for battle.
Zak knew that, to Matron Malice, sheer skill with weapons
might not be enough. Zak had to keep Malice from conversing
with Drizzt for any length of time. She would not
approve of her son's attitudes.
Drizzt was tiring now, Zak could see, though he recognized
the weariness in his student's arms to be partly deception.
"Go with it” he muttered silently, and he suddenly
"twisted" his ankle, his right arm flailing out wide and low
as he struggled for balance, opening a hole in his defenses
that Drizzt could not resist.
The expected thrust came in a flash, and Zak's left arm
streaked in a short cross-cut that slapped the scimitar right
out of Drizzt's hand.
"Ha!" Drizzt cried, having expected the move and launching
his second ruse. His remaining scimitar knifed over
Zak's left shoulder, inevitably dipping in the follow-through
of the parry.
But by the time Drizzt even launched the second blow,
Zak was already down to his knees. As Drizzt's blade cut
harmlessly high, Zak sprang to his feet and launched a right
cross, hilt first, that caught Drizzt squarely in the face. A
stunned Drizzt leaped back a long step and stood perfectly
still for a long moment. His remaining scimitar dropped to
the ground, and his glossed eyes did not blink.
"A feint within a feint within a feint!" Zak calmly explained.
Drizzt slumped to the floor, unconscious.
Matron Malice nodded her approval as Zak walked back
over to her. "He is ready for the Academy” she remarked.
Zak's face turned sour and he did not answer.
"Vierna is there already” Malice continued, "to teach as a
mistress in Arach- Tinilith, the School of Lloth. It is a high
honor”
A laurel for House Do'Urden, Zak knew, but he was smart
enough to keep his thoughts silent.
"Dinin will leave soon” said the matron.
Zak was surprised. Two children serving as masters in the
Academy at the same time? "You must have worked hard to
get such accommodations” he dared to remark.
Matron Malice smiled. "Favors owed, favors called in”
"To what end?" asked Zak. "Protection for Drizzt?"
Malice laughed aloud. "From what I have just witnessed,
Drizzt would more likely protect the other two!"
Zak bit his lip at the comment. Dinin was still twice the
fighter and ten times the heartless killer as Drizzt. Zak
knew that Malice had other motives.
"Three of the first eight houses will be represented by no
fewer than four children in the Academy over the next two
decades” Matron Malice admitted. "Matron Baenre's own
son will begin in the same class as Drizzt”
"So you have aspirations” Zak said. "How high, then, will
House Do'Urden climb under the guidance of Matron Malice?"
"Sarcasm will cost you your tongue” the matron mother
warned. "We would be fools to let slip by such an opportunity
to learn more of our rivals!"
"The first eight houses” Zak mused. "Be cautious, Matron
Malice. Do not forget to watch for rivals among the lesser
houses. There once was a house named DeVir that made
such a mistake”
"No attack will come from behind” Malice sneered. "We
are the ninth house but boast more power than but a handful
of others. None will strike at our backs; there are easier
targets higher up the line”
"And all to our gain” Zak put in.
"That is the point of it all, is it not?" Malice asked, her evil
smile wide on her face.
Zak didn't need to respond; the matron knew his true feelings.
That precisely was not the point.
"Speak less and your jaw will heal faster” Zak said later,
when he again was alone with Drizzt.
Drizzt cast him a vile glance.
The weapon master shook his head. "We have become
Chapter 9
Families
"Come quickly” Zak instructed Drizzt one evening after
they had finished their sparring. By the urgency of the
weapon master's tone, and by the fact that Zak didn't even
pause to wait for Drizzt, Drizzt knew that something important
was happening.
He finally caught up to Zak on the balcony of House
Do'Urden, where Maya and Briza already stood.
"What is it?" Drizzt asked.
Zak pulled him close and pointed out across the great cavern,
to the northeastern reaches of the city. Lights flashed
and faded in sudden bursts, a pillar of fire rose into the air,
then disappeared.
"A raid” Briza said offhandedly. "Minor houses, and of no
concern to us”
Zak saw that Drizzt did not understand.
"One house has attacked another” he explained. "Revenge,
perhaps, but most likely an attempt to climb to a
higher rank in the city”
"The battle has been long” Briza remarked, "and still the
lights flash”
Zak continued to clarify the event for the confused secondboy
of the house. "The attackers should have blocked
the battle within rings of darkness. Their inability to do so
might indicate that the defending house was ready for the
raid”
"All cannot be going well for the attackers” Maya agreed.
Drizzt could hardly believe what he was hearing. Even
more alarming than the news itself was the way his family
talked about the event. They were so calm in their descriptions,
as if this was an expected occurrence.
"The attackers must leave no witnesses” Zak explained to
Drizzt, "else they will face the wrath of the ruling council”
"But we are witnesses” Drizzt reasoned.
"No” Zak replied. "We are onlookers; this battle is none of
our affair. Only the nobles of the defending house are
awarded the right to place accusations against their attackers”
"If any nobles are left alive” Briza added, obviously enjoying
the drama.
At that moment, Drizzt wasn't sure if he liked this new
revelation. However he might have felt, he found that he
could not tear his gaze from the continuing spectacle of
drow battle. All the Do'Urden compound was astir now, soldiers
and slaves running about in search of a better vantage
point and shouting out descriptions of the action and rumors
of the perpetrators.
This was drow society in all its macabre play, and while it
seemed ultimately wrong in the heart of the youngest member
of House Do'Urden, Drizzt could not deny the excitement
of the night. Nor could Drizzt deny the expressions of
obvious pleasure stamped upon the faces of the three who
shared the balcony with him.
Alton made his way through his private chambers one final
time, to make certain that any artifacts or tomes that
might seem even the least bit sacrilegious were safely hidden.
He was expecting a visit from a matron mother, a rare
occasion for a master of the Academy not connected with
Arach- Tinilith, the School of Lloth. Alton was more than a
little anxious about the motives of this particular visitor, Matron
SiNafay Hun'ett, head of the city's fifth house and
mother of Masoj, Alton's partner in conspiracy.
A bang on the stone door of the outermost chamber in his
complex told Alton that his guest had arrived. He straightened
his robes and took yet another glance around the
room. The door swung open before Alton could get there,
and Matron SiNafay swept into the room. How easily she
made the transformation-walking from the absolute dark
of the outside corridor into the candlelight of Alton's
chamber-without so much as a flinch.
SiNafay was smaller than Alton had imagined, diminutive
even by the standards of the drow. She stood barely more
than four feet high and weighed, by Alton's estimation, no
more than fifty pounds. She was a matron mother, though,
and Alton reminded himself that she could strike him dead
with a single spell.
Alton averted his gaze obediently and tried to convince
himself that there was nothing unusual about this visit. He
grew less at ease, however, when Masoj trotted in and to his
mother's side, a smug smile on his face.
"Greetings from House Hun'ett, Gelroos” Matron SiNafay
said. "Seventy-five years and more it has been since we last
talked”
"Gelroos?" Alton mumbled under his breath. He cleared
his throat to cover his surprise. "My greetings to you, Matron
SiNafay” he managed to stammer. "Has it been so very
long?"
"You should come to the house” the matron said. "Your
chambers remain empty”
My chambers? Alton began to feel very sick.
SiNafay did not miss the look. A scowl crossed her face
and her eyes narrowed evilly.
Alton suspected that his secret was out. If the Faceless
One had been a member of the Hun'ett family, how could Alton
hope to fool the matron mother of the house? He
scanned for the best escape route, or for some way he could
at least kill the traitorous Masoj before SiNafay struck him
down.
When he looked back toward Matron SiNafay, she had already
begun a quiet spell. Her eyes popped wide at its completion,
her suspicions confirmed.
"Who are you?" she asked, her voice sounding more curious
than concerned.
There was no escape, no way to get at Masoj, standing
prudently close to his powerful mother's side.
"Who are you?" SiNafay asked again, taking a threeheaded
instrument from her belt, the dreaded snakeheaded
whip that injected the most painful and
incapacitating poison known to drow.
" Alton” he stuttered, having no choice but to answer. He
knew that since she now was on her guard, SiNafay would
use simple magic to detect any lies he might concoct. "I am
Alton DeVir”
"DeVir?" Matron SiNafay appeared at least intrigued. "Of
the House DeVir that died some years ago?"
"I am the only survivor” Alton admitted.
"And you killed Gelroos-Gelroos Hun'ett-and took his
place as master in Sorcere” the matron reasoned, her voice
a snarl. Doom closed in all around Alton.
"I did not. . . I could not know his name. . . He would have
killed me!" Alton stuttered.
"I killed Gelroos” came a voice from the side.
SiNafay and Alton turned to Masoj, who once again held
his favorite two-handed crossbow.
"With this” the young Hun'ett explained. "On the night
House DeVir fell. I found my excuse in Gelroos's battle with
that one” He pointed to Alton.
"Gelroos was your brother” Matron SiNafay reminded
Masoj.
"Damn his bones!" Masoj spat. "For four miserable years I
served him-served him as if he were a matron mother! He
would have kept me from Sorcere, would have forced me
into the Melee-Magthere instead”
The matron looked from Masoj to Alton and back to her
son. " And you let this one live” she reasoned, a smile again
on her lips. "You killed your enemy and forged an alliance
with a new master in a single move”
" As I was taught” Masoj said through clenched teeth, not
knowing whether punishment or praise would follow.
"You were just a child” SiNafay remarked, suddenly realizing
the timetable involved.
Masoj accepted the compliment silently.
Alton watched it all anxiously. "Then what of me?" he
cried. "Is my life forfeit?"
SiNafay turned a glare on him. "Your life as Alton DeVir
ended, so it would seem, on the night House DeVir fell. Thus
you remain the Faceless One, Gelroos Hun'ett. I can use
your eyes in the Academy-to watch over my son and my
enemies”
Alton could hardly breathe. To so suddenly find himself
allied with one of the most powerful houses in Menzoberranzan!
A jumble of possibilities and questions flooded his
mind, one in particular, which had haunted him for nearly
two decades.
His adopted matron mother recognized his excitement.
"Speak your thoughts” she commanded.
"You are a high priestess of Lloth” Alton said boldly, that
one notion overpowering all caution. "It is within your
power to grant me my fondest desire”
"You dare to ask a favor?" Matron SiNafay balked, though
she saw the torment on Alton's face and was intrigued by
the apparent importance of this mystery. "Very well”
"What house destroyed my family?" Alton growled. "Ask
the nether world, I beg, Matron SiNafay”
SiNafay considered the question carefully, and the possibilities
of Alton's apparent thirst for vengeance. Another
benefit of allowing this one into the family? SiNafay wondered.
"This is known to me already” she replied. "Perhaps when
you have proven your value, I will tell-"
"No!" Alton cried. He stopped short, realizing that he had
interrupted a matron mother, a crime that could invoke a
punishment of death.
SiNafay held back her angry urges. "This question must
be very important for you to act so foolishly” she said.
"Please” Alton begged. "I must know. Kill me if you will,
but tell me first who it was”
SiNafay liked his courage, and his obsession could only
prove of value to her. "House Do'Urden” she said.
"Do'Urden?" Alton echoed, hardly believing that a house
so far back in the city hierarchy could have defeated House
DeVir.
"You will take no actions against them” Matron SiNafay
warned. "And I will forgive your insolence-this time. You
are a son of House Hun'ett now; remember always your
place!" She let it stay at that, knowing that one who had
been clever enough to carry out such a deception for the
better part of two decades would not be foolish enough to
disobey the matron mother of his house.
"Come Masoj” SiNafay said to her son, "let us leave this
one alone so that he may consider his new identity”
"I must tell you, Matron SiNafay” Masoj dared to say as he
and his mother made their way out of Sorcere, " Alton DeVir
is a buffoon. He might bring harm to House Hun'ett”
"He survived the fall of his own house” SiNafay replied,
"and has played through the ruse as the Faceless One for
nineteen years. A buffoon? Perhaps, but a resourceful buffoon
at the least”
Masoj unconsciously rubbed the area of his eyebrow that
had never grown back. "I have suffered the antics of Alton
DeVir for all these years” he said. "He does have a fair share
of luck, I admit, and can get himself out of trouble-though
he is usually the one who puts himself into it!"
"Do not fear” SiNafay laughed. " Alton brings value to our
house”
"What can we hope to gain?"
"He is a master of the Academy” SiNafay replied. "He gives
me eyes where I now need them” She stopped her son and
turned him to face her so that he might understand the implications
of her every word. "Alton DeVir's claim against
House Do'Urden may work in our favor. He was a noble of
the house, with rights of accusation”
"You mean to use Alton DeVir's charge to rally the great
houses into punishing House Do'Urden?" Masoj asked.
"The great houses would hardly be willing to strike out
for an incident that occurred almost twenty years ago”
SiNafay replied. "House Do'Urden executed House DeVir's
destruction nearly to perfection-a clean kill. To so much as
speak an open charge against the Do'Urdens now would be
to invite the wrath of the great houses on ourselves”
"What good then is Alton DeVir?" Masoj asked. "His claim
is useless to us”
The matron replied, "You are only a male and cannot understand
the complexities of the ruling hierarchy. With Alton
DeVir's charge whispered into the proper ears, the
ruling council might look the other way if a single house
took revenge on Alton's behalf”
"To what end?" Masoj remarked, not understanding the
importance. "You would risk the losses of such a battle for
the destruction of a lesser house?"
"So thought House DeVir of House Do'Urden” explained
SiNafay. "In our world, we must be as concerned with the
lower houses as with the higher ones. All of the great
houses would be wise now to watch closely the moves of
Daermon N'a'shezbaernon, the ninth house that is known as
Do'Urden. It now has both a master and a mistress serving
in the Academy and three high priestesses, with a fourth
nearing the goal”
"Four high priestesses?" Masoj pondered. "In a single
house” Only three of the top eight houses could claim more
than that. Normally, sisters aspiring to such heights inspired
rivalries that inevitably thinned the ranks.
"And the legions of House Do'Urden number more than
three hundred fifty” SiNafay continued, "all of them trained
by perhaps the finest weapon master in all the city”
"Zaknafein Do'Urden, of course!" Masoj recalled.
"You have heard of him?"
"His name is often spoken at the Academy, even in Sorcere”
"Good” SiNafay purred. "Then you will understand the
fun weight of the mission I have chosen for you”
An eager light came into Masoj's eyes.
"Another Do'Urden is soon to begin there” SiNafay explained.
"Not a master, but a student. By the words of those
few who have seen this boy, Drizzt, at training, he will be as
fine a fighter as Zaknafein. We should not allow this”
"You want me to kill the boy?" Masoj asked eagerly.
"No” SiNafay replied, "not yet. I want you to learn of him,
to understand the motivations of his every move. If the time
to strike does come, you must be ready”
Masoj liked the devious assignment, but one thing still
bothered him more than a little. "We still have Alton to consider”
he said. "He is impatient and daring. What are the
consequences to House Hun'ett if he strikes House Do'Urden
before the proper time? Might we invoke open war in
the city, with House Hun'ett viewed as the perpetrator?"
"Do not worry, my son” Matron SiNafay replied. "If Alton
DeVir makes a grievous error while in the guise of Gelroos.
Hun'ett, we expose him as a murderous imposter and no
member of our family. He will be an unhoused rogue with
an executioner facing him from every direction”
Her casual explanation put Masoj at ease, but Matron
SiNafay, so knowledgeable in the ways of drow society, had
understood the risk she was taking from the moment she
had accepted Alton DeVir into her house. Her plan seemed
foolproof, and the possible gain-the elimination of this
growing House Do'Urden-was a tempting piece of bait.
But the dangers, too, were very real. While it was perfectly
acceptable for one house to covertly destroy another,
the consequences of failure could not be ignored. Earlier
that very night, a lesser house had struck out against a rival
and, if the rumors held true, had failed. The illuminations of
the next day would probably force the ruling council to enact
a pretense of justice, to make an example of the unsuccessful
attackers. In her long life, Matron SiNafay had
witnessed this "justice" several times.
Not a single member of any of the aggressor houses-she
was not even allowed to remember their names-had ever
survived.
Zak awakened Drizzt early the next morning. "Come” he
said. "We are bid to go out of the house this day”
All thoughts of sleep washed away from Drizzt at the
news. "Outside the house?" he echoed. In all of his nineteen
years, Drizzt had never once walked beyond the adamantite
fence of the Do'Urden complex. He had only watched
that outside world of Menzoberranzan from the balcony.
While Zak waited, Drizzt quickly collected his soft boots
and his piwafwi. "Will there be no lesson this day?" Drizzt
asked.
"We shall see” was all that Zak replied, but in his thoughts,
the weapon master figured that Drizzt might be in for one
of the most startling revelations of his life. A house had
failed in a raid, and the ruling council had requested the
presence of all the nobles of the city, to bear witness to the
weight of justice.
Briza appeared in the corridor outside the practice room's
door. "Hurry” she scolded. "Matron Malice does not wish
our house to be among the last groups joining the gathering!"
The matron mother herself, floating atop a blue-glowing
disk-for matron mothers rarely walked through the cityled
the procession out of House Do'Urden's grand gate.
Briza walked at her mother's side, with Maya and Rizzen in
the second rank and Drizzt and Zak taking up the rear.
Vierna and Dinin, attending to the duties of their positions
in the Academy, had gone to the ruling council's summons
with a different group.
All the city was astir this morning, rumbling in the ru.
mors of the failed raid. Drizzt walked through the bustle
wide-eyed, staring in wonderment at the close-up view of
the decorated drow houses. Slaves of every inferior racegoblins,
orcs, even giants-scrambled out of the way, recognizing
Malice, riding her enchanted carriage, as a matron
mother. Drow commoners halted conversations and remained
respectfully silent as the noble family passed.
As they made their way toward the northwestern section,
the location of the guilty house, they came into a lane
blocked by a squabbling caravan of duergar, gray dwarves.
A dozen carts had been overturned or locked togetherapparently,
two groups of duergar had come into the narrow
lane together, neither relinquishing the right-of-way.
Briza pulled the snake-headed whip from her belt and
chased off a few of the creatures, clearing the way for Malice
to float up to the apparent leaders of the two groups.
The dwarves turned on her angrily-until they realized
her station.
"Beggin' yer pardon, Madam” one of them stammered.
"Unfortunate accident is all”
Malice eyed the contents of one of the nearest carts,
crates of giant crab legs and other delicacies.
"You have slowed my journey” Malice said calmly.
"We have come to your city in hopes of trade” the other
duergar explained. He cast an angry glare at his counterpart,
and Malice understood that the two were rivals,
probably bartering the same goods to the same drow
house.
"I will forgive your insolence. . “ she offered graciously,
still eyeing the crates.
The two duergar suspected what was forthcoming. So did
Zak. "We eat well tonight” he whispered to Drizzt with a sly
wink. "Matron Malice would not let such an opportunity
slip by without gain”
". . . if you can see your way to deliver half of these carts to
the gate of House Do'Urden this night” Malice finished.
The duergar started to protest but quickly dismissed the
foolish notion. How they hated dealing with drow elves!
"You will be compensated appropriately” Malice continued.
"House Do'Urden is not a poor house. Between both of
your caravans, you will still have enough goods to satisfy
the house you came to see”
Neither of the duergar could refute the simple logic, but
under these trading circumstances, where they had offended
a matron mother, they knew the compensation for
their valuable foods would hardly be appropriate. Still, the
gray dwarves could only accept it all as a risk of doing business
in Menzoberranzan. They bowed politely and set
their troops to clearing the way for the drow procession.
House Thken'duis, the unsuccessful raiders of the previous
night, had barricaded themselves within their twostalagmite
structure, fully expecting what was to come.
Outside their gates, all of the nobles of Menzoberranzan,
more than a thousand drow, had gathered, with Matron
Baenre and the other seven matron mothers of the ruling
council at their head. More disastrous for the guilty house,
the entirety of the three schools of the Academy, students
and instructors, had surrounded the Thken'duis compound.
Matron Malice led her group to the front line behind the
ruling matrons. As she was matron of the ninth house, only
one step from the council, other drow nobles readily
stepped out of her way.
"House Thken'duis has angered the Spider Queen!" Ma.
tron Baenre proclaimed in a voice amplified by magical
spells.
"Only because they failed” Zak whispered to Drizzt.
Briza cast both males an angry glare.
Matron Baenre bade three young drow, two females and
a male, to her side'. "These are all that remain of House
Freth” she explained. "Can you tell us, orphans of House
Freth” she asked of them, "who it was that attacked your
home?"
"House Thken'duis!" they shouted together.
"Rehearsed” Zak commented.
Briza turned around again. "Silence!" she whispered
harshly.
Zak slapped Drizzt on the back of the head. "Yes” he
agreed. "Do be quiet!"
Drizzt started to protest, but Briza had already turned
away and Zak's smile was too wide to argue against.
"Then it is the will of the ruling council” Matron Baenre
was saying, "that House Thken'duis suffer the consequences
of their actions!"
"What of the orphans of House Freth?" came a call from
the crowd.
Matron Baenre stroked the head of the oldest female, a
cleric recently finished in her studies at the Academy. "Nobles
they were born, and nobles they remain” Baenre said.
"House Baenre accepts them into its protection; they bear
the name of Baenre now”
Disgruntled whispers filtered through the gathering.
Three young nobles, two of them female, was quite a prize.
Any house in the city gladly would have taken them in.
"Baenre” Briza whispered to Malice. "Just what the first
house needs, more clerics!"
"Sixteen high priestesses is not enough, it seems” Malice I
answered. ;
" And no doubt, Baenre will take any surviving soldiers of
House Freth” Briza reasoned.
Malice was not so certain. Matron Baenre was walking a
thin line by taking even the surviving nobles. If House
Baenre got too powerful, Lloth surely would take exception.
In situations such as this, where a house had been almost
eradicated, surviving common soldiers were normally
pooled out to bidding houses. Malice would have to watch
for such an auction. Soldiers did not come cheaply, but at
this time, Malice would welcome the opportunity to add to
her forces, particularly if there were any magic-users to be
had.
Matron Baenre addressed the guilty house. "House Thkenduis!"
she called. "You have broken our laws and have been
rightfully caught. Fight if you will, but know that you have
brought this doom upon yourselfl" With a wave of her
hand, she set the Academy, the dispatcher of justice, into
motion.
Great braziers had been placed in eight positions around
House Thken'duis, attended by mistresses of Arach- Tinilith
and the highest-ranking clerical students. Flames roared to
life and shot into the air as the high priestesses opened gates
to the lower planes. Drizzt watched closely, mesmerized c:
and hoping to catch a glimpse of either Dinin or Vierna.
Denizens of the lower planes, huge, many-armed monsters,
slime covered and spitting fire, stepped through the
flames. Even the nearest high priestesses backed away from
the grotesque horde. The creatures gladly accepted such
servitude. When the signal from Matron Baenre came, they
eagerly descended upon House Teken'duis.
Glyphs and wards exploded at every corner of the house's
feeble gate, but these were mere inconveniences to the
summoned creatures.
The wizards and students of Sorcere then went into
action, slamming at the top of House Teken'duis with conjured
lightning bolts, balls of acid, and fireballs.
Students and masters of Melee-Magthere, the school of
fighters, rushed about with heavy crossbows, firing into
windows where the doomed family might try to escape.
The horde of monsters bashed through the doors. Lightning
flashed and thunder boomed.
Zak looked at Drizzt, and a frown replaced the master's
smile. Caught up in the excitement-and it certainly was
exciting-Drizzt bore an expression of awe.
The first screams of the doomed family rolled out from
the house, screams so terrible and agonized that they stole
any macabre pleasure that Drizzt might have been experiencing.
He grabbed Zak's shoulder, spinning the weapon
master to him, begging for an explanation.
One of the sons of House Teken'duis, fleeing a ten-armed
giant monster, stepped out onto the balcony of a high window.
A dozen crossbow quarrels struck him simultaneously,
and before he even fell dead, three separate lightning
bolts alternately lifted him from the balcony, then dropped
him back onto it.
Scorched and mutilated, the drow corpse started to tumble
from its high perch, but the grotesque monster reached
out a huge, clawed hand from the window and pulled it
back in to devour it.
"Drow justice” Zak said coldly. He didn't offer Drizzt any
consolation; he wanted the brutality of this moment to stick
in the young drow's mind for the rest of his life.
The siege went on for more than an hour, and when it was
finished, when the denizens of the lower planes were dismissed
through the braziers' gates and the students and instructors
of the Academy started their march back to Tier
Breche, House Teken'duis was no more than a glowing lump
of lifeless, molten stone.
Drizzt watched it all, horrified, but too afraid of the consequences
to run away. He did not notice the artistry of
Menzoberranzan on the return trip to House Do'Urden.
Chapter 10
The Stain of Blood
"Zaknafein is out of the house?" Malice asked.
"I sent him and Rizzen to the Academy to deliver a f!lessage
to Vierna” Briza explained. "He shan't return for many
hours, not before the light of Narbondel begins its descent”
"That is good” said Malice. "You both understand your duties
in this farce?"
Briza and Maya nodded. "I have never heard of such a deception”
Maya remarked. "Is it necessary?"
"It was planned for another of the house” Briza answered,
looking to Matron Malice for confirmation. "Nearly
four centuries ago”
"Yes” agreed Malice. "The same was to be done to Zaknafein,
but the unexpected death of Matron Vartha, my
mother, disrupted the plans”
"That was when you became the matron mother” Maya
said.
"Yes” replied Malice, "though I had not passed my first
century of life and was still training in Arach. Tinilith. It was
not a pleasant time in the history of House Do'Urden”
"But we survived” said Briza. "With the death of Matron
Vartha, Nalfein and I became nobles of the house”
"The test on Zaknafein was never attempted” Maya reasoned.
"Too many other duties preceded it” Malice answered.
"We will try it on Drizzt, though” said Maya.
"The punishment of House Thken'duis convinced me that
this action had to be taken” said Malice.
"Yes” Briza agreed. "Did you notice Drizzt's expression
throughout the execution?"
"I did” answered Maya. "He was revolted”
"Unfitting for a drow warrior” said Malice, "and so this
duty is upon us. Drizzt will leave for the Academy in a short
time, we must stain his hands with drow blood and steal his
innocence”
"It seems a lot of trouble for a male child” Briza grumbled.
"If Drizzt cannot adhere to our ways, then why do we not
simply give him to Lloth?"
"I will bear no more children!" Malice growled in response.
"Every member of this family is important if we are
to gain prominence in the city!" Secretly Malice hoped for
another gain in converting Drizzt to the evil ways of the
drow. She hated Zaknafein as much as she desired him, and
turning Drizzt into a drow warrior, a true heartless drow
warrior, would distress the weapon master greatly.
"On with it, then” Malice proclaimed. She clapped her
hands, and a large chest walked in, supported by eight animated
spider legs. Behind it came a nervous goblin slave.
"Come, Byuchyuch” Malice said in a comforting tone.
Anxious to please, the slave bounded up before Malice's
throne and held perfectly still as the matron mother went
through the incantation of a long and complicated spell.
Briza and Maya watched in admiration at their mother's
skills; the little goblin's features bulged and twisted, and its
skin darkened. A few minutes later, the slave had assumed
the appearance of a male drow. Byuchyuch looked at its features
happily, not understanding that the transformation
was merely a prelude to death.
"You are a drow soldier now” Maya said to it, "and my
champion. You must kill only a single, inferior fighter to
take your place as a free commoner of House Do'Urden!"
After ten years as an indentured servant to the wicked
dark elves, the goblin was more than eager.
Malice rose and started out of the anteroom. "Come” she
ordered, and her two daughters, the goblin, and the animated
chest fell in line behind her.
They came upon Drizzt in the practice room, polishing
the razor edge of his scimitars. He leaped straight up to silent
attention at the sight of the unexpected visitors.
"Greetings, my son” Malice said in a tone more motherly
than Drizzt had ever heard. "We have a test for you this day,
a simple task necessary for your acceptance into Melee-
Magthere”
Maya moved before her brother. "I am the youngest, beside
yourself” she declared. "Thus, I am granted the rights
of challenge, which I now execute”
Drizzt stood confused. He had never heard of such a
thing. Maya called the chest to her side and reverently
opened the cover.
"You have your weapons and your piwafwi” she explained.
"Now it is time for you to don the complete outfit of
a noble of House Do'Urden” From the chest she pulled out a
pair of high black boots and handed them to Drizzt.
Drizzt eagerly slipped out of his normal boots and put on
the new ones. They were incredibly soft, and they magically
shifted and adjusted to a perfect fit on his feet. Drizzt knew
the magic within them: they would allow him to move in absolute
silence. Before he had even finished admiring them,
though, Maya gave him the next gift, even more magnificent.
Drizzt dropped his piwafwi to the floor as he took a set of
silvery chain mail. In all the Realms, there was no armor as
supple and finely crafted as drow chain mail. It weighed no
more than a heavy shirt and would bend as easily as silken
cloth, yet could deflect the tip of a spear as surely as
dwarven-crafted plate mail.
"You fight with two weapons” Maya said, "and therefore
need no shield. But put your scimitars in this; it is more fitting
to a drow noble” She handed Drizzt a black leather
belt, its clasp a huge emerald and its two scabbards richly
decorated in jewels and gemstones.
"Prepare yourself” Malice said to Drizzt. "The gifts must
be earned” As Drizzt started to don the outfit, Malice
moved beside the altered goblin, which stood nervously in
the growing realization that its fight would be no simple
task.
"When you kill him, the items will be yours” Malice promised.
The goblin's smile returned tenfold; it could not comprehend
that it had no chance against Drizzt.
When Drizzt again fastened his piwafwi around his neck,
Maya introduced the phony drow soldier. "This is Byuchyuch”
she said, "my champion. You must defeat him to earn
the gifts. . . and your proper place in the family”
Never doubting his abilities, and thinking the contest to be
a simple sparring match, Drizzt readily agreed. "Let it begin,
then” he said, drawing his scimitars from their lavish
sheaths.
Malice gave Byuchyuch a comforting nod, and the goblin
took up the sword and shield that Maya had provided and
moved right in at Drizzt.
Drizzt began slowly, trying to take a measure of his opponent
before attempting any daring offensive strikes. In only
a moment, though, Drizzt realized how badly Byuchyuch
handled the sword and shield. Not knowing the truth of the
creature's identity, Drizzt could hardly believe that a drow
would show such ineptitude with weapons. He wondered if
Byuchyuch was baiting him, and with that thought, continued
his cautious approach.
After a few more moments of Byuchyuch's wild and offbalanced
swings, however, Drizzt felt compelled to take the
initiative. He slapped one scimitar against Byuchyuch's
shield. The goblin-drow responded with a lumbering
thrust, and Drizzt slapped its sword from its hand with his
free blade and executed a simple twist that brought the
scimitar's tip to a halt against the hollow of Byuchyuch's
chest.
"Too easy” Drizzt muttered under his breath.
But the true test had only begun.
On cue, Briza cast a mind-numbing spell on the goblin,
freezing it in its helpless position. Still aware of its predicament,
Byuchyuch tried to dive away, but Briza's spell held it
still.
"Finish the strike” Malice said to Drizzt. Drizzt looked at
his scimitar, then to Malice, unable to believe what he was
hearing.
"Maya's champion must be killed” Briza snarled.
"I cannot-" Drizzt began.
"Kill!" Malice roared, and this time the word carried the
weight of a magical command.
"Thrust!" Briza likewise commanded.
Drizzt felt their words compelling his hand to action.
Thoroughly disgusted with the thought of murdering a
helpless foe, he concentrated with all of his mental strength
to resist. While he managed to deny the commands for a
few seconds, Drizzt found that he could not pull the
weapon away.
"Kill!" Malice screamed.
"Strike!" yelled Briza.
It went on for several more agonizing seconds. Sweat
beaded on Drizzt's brow. Then the young drow's willpower
broke. His scimitar slipped quickly between Byuchyuch's
ribs and found the unfortunate creature's heart. Briza released
Byuchyuch from her holding spell then, to let Drizzt
see the agony on the phony drow's face and hear the gurgles
as the dying Byuchyuch slipped to the floor.
Drizzt could not find his breath as he stared at his bloodstained
weapon.
It was Maya's turn to act. She clipped Drizzt on the shoulder
with her mace, knocking him to the floor.
"You killed my champion!" she growled. "Now you must
fight me!"
Drizzt rolled back to his feet, away from the enraged female.
He had no intention of fighting, but before he could
even drop his weapons, Malice read his thoughts and
warned, "If you do not fight, Maya will kill you!"
"This is not the way” Drizzt protested, but his words were
lost in the ring of adamantite as he parried a heavy blow
with one scimitar.
He was now into it, whether he liked it or not. Maya was a
skilled fighter-all females spent many hours training with
weapons-and she was stronger than Drizzt. But Drizzt was
Zak's son, the prime student, and when he admitted to himself
that he had no way out of this predicament, he came in
at Maya's mace and shield with every cunning maneuver he
had been taught.
Scimitars weaved and dipped in a dance that awed Briza
and Maya. Malice hardly noticed, caught in the midst of yet
another mighty spell. Malice never doubted that Drizzt
could defeat his sister, and she had incorporated her expectations
into the plan.
Drizzt's moves were all defensive as he continued to hope
for some semblance of sanity to come over his mother, and
that this whole thing would be stopped. He wanted to back
Maya up, cause her to stumble, and end the fight by putting
her in a helpless position. Drizzt had to believe that Briza
and Malice would not compel him to kill Maya as he had
killed Byuchyuch.
Finally, Maya did slip. She threw her shield out to deflect
an arcing scimitar but became overbalanced in the block,
and her arm went wide. Drizzt's other blade knifed in, only
to nick at Maya's breast and force her back.
Malice's spell caught the weapon in midthrust.
The blood-stained adamantite blade writhed to life and
Drizzt found himself holding the tail of a serpent, a fanged
viper that turned back against him!
The enchanted snake spat its venom in Drizzt's eyes,
blinding him, then he felt the pain of Briza's whip. All six
snake heads of the awful weapon bit into Drizzt's back, tearing
through his new armor and jolting him in excruciating
pain. He crumbled down into a curled position, helpless as
Briza snapped the whip in, again and again.
"Never strike at a drow female!" she screamed as she beat
Drizzt into unconsciousness.
An hour later, Drizzt opened his eyes. He was in his bed,
Matron Malice standing over him. The high priestess had
tended to his wounds, but the sting remained, a vivid reminder
of the lesson. But it was not nearly as vivid as the
blood that still stained Drizzt's scimitar.
"The armor will be replaced” Malice said to him. "You are
a drow warrior now. You have earned it” She turned and
walked out of the room, leaving Drizzt to his pain and his
fallen innocence.
"Do not send him” Zak argued as emphatically as he
dared. He stared up at Matron Malice, the smug queen on
her high throne of stone and black velvet. As always, Briza
and Maya stood obediently by her sides.
"He is a drow fighter” Malice replied, her tone still controlled.
"He must go to the Academy. It is our way”
Zak looked around helplessly. He hated this place, the
chapel anteroom, with its sculptures of the Spider Queen
leering down at him from every angle, and with Malice
sitting-towering-above him from her seat of power.
Zak shook the images away and regained his courage, reminding
himself that this time he had something worth arguing
about.
"Do not send him!" he growled. "They will ruin him!"
Matron Malice's hands clenched down on the rock arms
of her great chair.
"Already Drizzt is more skilled than half of those in the
Academy” Zak continued quickly, before the matron's anger
burst forth. "Allow me two more years, and I will make
him the finest swordsman in all of Menzoberranzan!"
Malice eased back on her seat. From what she had seen of
her son's progress, she could not deny the possibilities of
Zak's claim. "He goes” she said calmly. "There is more to the
making of a drow warrior than skill with weapons. Drizzt
has other lessons he must learn”
"Lessons of treachery?" Zak spat, too angry to care about
the consequences. Drizzt had told him what Malice and her
evil daughters had done that day, and Zak was wise enough
to understand their actions. Their "lesson" had nearly broken
the boy, and had, perhaps, forever stolen from Drizzt
the ideals he held so dear. Drizzt would find his morals and
principles harder to cling to now that the pedestal of purity
had been knocked out from under him”
"Watch your tongue, Zaknafein” Matron Malice warned.
"I fight with passion!" the weapon master snapped. "That
is why I win. Your son, too, fights with passion-do not let
the conforming ways of the Academy take that from him!"
"Leave us” Malice instructed her daughters. Maya bowed
and rushed out through the door. Briza followed more
slowly, pausing to cast a suspicious eye upon Zak.
Zak didn't return the glare, but he entertained a fantasy
concerning his sword and Briza's smug smile.
"Zaknafein” Malice began, again coming forward in her
chair. "I have tolerated your blasphemous beliefs through
these many years because of your skill with weapons. You
have taught my soldiers well, and your love of killing drow,
particularly clerics of the Spider Queen, has aided the ascent
of House Do'Urden. I am not, and have not been, ungrateful.
"But I warn you now, one final time, that Drizzt is my son,
not his sire's! He will go to the Academy and learn what he
must to take his place as a prince of House Do'Urden. If you
interfere with what must be, Zaknafein, I will no longer
turn my eyes from your actions! Your heart will be given to
Lloth”
Zak stamped his heels on the floor and snapped a short
bow of his head, then spun about and departed, trying to
find some option in this dark and hopeless picture.
As he made his way through the main corridor, he again
heard in his mind the screams of the dying children of
House DeVir, children who never got the chance to witness
the evils of the drow Academy. Perhaps they were better off
dead.
Chapter 11
Grim Preference
Zak slid one of his swords from its scabbard and admired
the weapon's wondrous detail. This sword, as with most of
the drow weapons, had been forged by the gray dwarves,
then traded to Menzoberranzan. The duergar workmanship
was exquisite, but it was the work done on the weapon
after the dark elves had acquired it that made it so very special.
None of the races of the surface or Underdark could
outdo the dark elves in the art of enchanting weapons. Imbued
with the strange emanations of the Underdark, the
magical power unique to the lightless world, and blessed by
the unholy clerics of Lloth, no blade ever sat in a wielder's
hand more ready to kill.
Other races, mostly dwarves and surface elves, also took
pride in their crafted weapons. Fine swords and mighty
hammers hung over mantles as showpieces, always with a
bard nearby to spout the accompanying legend that most
often began, "In the days of yore. . “
Drow weapons were different, never showpieces. They
were locked in the necessities of the present, never in reminiscences,
and their purpose remained unchanged for as
long as they held an edge fine enough for battle-fine
enough to kill.
Zak brought the blade up before his eyes. In his hands,
the sword had become more than an instrument of battle. It
was an extension of his rage, his answer to an existence he
could not accept.
It was his answer, too, perhaps, to another problem that
seemed to have no resolution.
He walked into the training hall, where Drizzt was hard at
work spinning attack routines against a practice dummy.
Zak paused to watch the young drow at practice, wondering
if Drizzt would ever again consider the dance of weapons
a form of play. How the scimitars flowed in Drizzt's
hands! Interweaving with uncanny precision, each blade
seemed to anticipate the other's moves and whirred about
in perfect complement.
This young drow might soon be an unrivaled fighter, a
master beyond Zaknafein himself.
"Can you survive?" Zak whispered. "Have you the heart of
a drow warrior?" Zak hoped that the answer would be an
emphatic "no” but either way, Drizzt was surely doomed.
Zak looked down at his sword again and knew what he
must do. He slid its sister blade from its sheath and started a
determined walk toward Drizzt.
Drizzt saw him coming and turned at the ready. "A final
fight before I leave for the Academy?" He laughed.
Zak paused to take note of Drizzt's smile. A facade? Or
had the young drow really forgiven himself for his actions
against Maya's champion. It did not matter, Zak reminded
himself. Even if Drizzt had recovered from his mother's torments,
the Academy would destroy him. The weapon master
said nothing; he just came on in a flurry of cuts and stabs
that put Drizzt immediately on the defensive. Drizzt took it
in stride, not yet realizing that this final encounter with his
mentor was much more than their customary sparring.
"I will remember everything you taught me” Drizzt promised,
dodging a cut and launching a fierce counter of his
own. "I will carve my name in the halls of Melee-Magthere
and make you proud”
The scowl on Zak's face surprised Drizzt, and the young
drow grew even more confused when the weapon master's
next attack sent a sword knifing straight at his heart. Drizzt
leaped aside, slapping at the blade in sheer desperation, and
narrowly avoided impalement.
"Are you so very sure of yourself?" Zak growled, stubbornly
pursuing Drizzt.
Drizzt set himself as their blades met in ringing fury. "I am
a fighter” he declared. "A drow warrior!"
"You are a dancer!" Zak shot back in a derisive tone. He
slammed his sword onto Drizzt's blocking scimitar so savagely
that the young drow's arm tingled.
" An imposter!" Zak cried. " A pretender to a title you can.
not begin to understand!"
Drizzt went on the offensive. Fires burned in his lavender
eyes and new strength guided his scimitars' sure cuts.
But Zak was relentless. He fended the attacks and continued
his lesson. "Do you know the emotions of murder?" he
spat. "Have you reconciled yourself to the act you committed?"
Drizzt's only answers were a frustrated growl and a renewed
attack.
"Ah, the pleasure of plunging your sword into the bosom
of a high priestess” Zak taunted. "To see the light of warmth
leave her body while her lips utter silent curses in your
face! Or have you ever heard the screams of dying chil.
dren?"
Drizzt let up his attack, but Zak would not allow a break.
The weapon master came back on the offensive, each thrust
aimed for a vital area.
"How loud, those screams” Zak continued. "They echo
over the centuries in your mind; they chase you down the
paths of your entire life”
Zak halted the action so that Drizzt might weigh his every
word. "You have never heard them, have you, dancer?" The
weapon master stretched his arms out wide, an invitation.
"Come, then, and claim your second kill” he said, tapping
his stomach. "In the belly, where the pain is greatest, so that
my screams may echo in your mind. Prove to me that you
are the drow warrior you claim to be”
The tips of Drizzt's scimitars slowly made their way to the
stone floor. He wore no smile now.
"You hesitate” Zak laughed at him. "This is your chance to
make your name. A single thrust, and you will send a reputation
into the Academy before you. Other students, even
masters, will whisper your name as you pass. 'Drizzt Do'Urden;
they will say. 'The boy who slew the most honored
weapon master in all of Menzoberranzan!' Is this not what
you desire?"
"Damn you” Drizzt spat back, but still he made no move to
attack.
"Drow warrior?" Zak chided him. "Do not be so quick to
claim a title you cannot begin to understand!"
Drizzt came on then, in a fury he had never before
known. His purpose was not to kill, but to defeat his teacher,
to steal the taunts from Zak's mouth with a fighting display
too impressive to be derided.
Drizzt was brilliant. He followed every move with three
others' and worked Zak low and high, inside and out wide.
Zak found his heels under him more often than the balls of
his feet, too involved was he in staying away from his stu.
dent's relentless thrusts to even think of taking the offensive.
He allowed Drizzt to continue the initiative for many
minutes, dreading its conclusion, the outcome he had already
decided to be the most preferable.
Zak then found that he could stand the delay no longer.
He sent one sword out in a lazy thrust and Drizzt promptly
slapped the weapon out of his hand.
Even as the young drow came on in anticipation of victory,
Zak slipped his empty hand into a pouch and grabbed a
magical little ceramic ball-one of those that so often had
aided him in battle.
"Not this time, Zaknafein!" Drizzt proclaimed, keeping his
attacks under control, remembering well the many occasions
that Zak reversed feigned disadvantage into clear advantage.
Zak fingered the ball, unable to come to terms with what
he must do.
Drizzt walked him through an attack sequence, then another,
measuring the advantage he had gained in stealing a
weapon. Confident of his position, Drizzt came in low and
hard with a single thrust.
Though Zak was distracted at the time, he still managed to
block the attack with his remaining sword. Drizzt's other
scimitar slashed down on top of the sword, pinning its tip to
the floor. In the same lightning movement, Drizzt slipped
his first blade free of Zak's parry and brought it up and
around, stopping the thrust barely an inch from Zak's
throat.
"I have you!" the young drow cried.
Zak's answer came in an explosion of light beyond anything
Drizzt had ever imagined.
Zak had prudently closed his eyes, but Drizzt, surprised,
could not accept the sudden change. His head burned in agony,
and he reeled backwards, trying to get away from the
light, away from the weapon master.
Keeping his eyes tightly shut, Zak had already divor.ced
himself from the need of vision. He let his keen ears guide
him now, and Drizzt, shuffling and stumbling, was an easy
target to discern. In a single motion, the whip came off Zak's
belt and he lashed out, catching Drizzt around the ankles
and dropping him to the floor.
Methodically, the weapon master came on, dreading
every step but knowing his chosen course of action to be
correct.
Drizzt realized that he was being stalked, but he could not
understand the motive. The light had stunned him, but he
was more surprised by Zak's continuation of the battle.
Drizzt set himself, unable to escape the trap, and tried to
think his way around his loss of sight. He had to feel the
flow of battle, to hear the sounds of his attacker and anticipate
each coming strike.
He brought his scimitars up just in time to block a sword
chop that would have split his skull.
Zak hadn't expected the parry. He recoiled and came in
from a different angle. Again he was foiled.
Now more curious than wanting to kill Drizzt, the
weapon master went through a series of attacks, sending
his sword into motions that would have sliced through the
defenses of many who could see him.
Blinded, Drizzt fought him off, putting a scimitar in line
with each new thrust.
Treachery!" Drizzt yelled, painful residual explosions
from the bright light still bursting inside his head. He
blocked another attack and tried to regain his footing, realizing
that he had little chance of continuing to fend off the
weapon master from a prone position.
The pain of the stinging light was too great, though, and
Drizzt, barely holding the edge of consciousness, stumbled
back to the stone, losing one scimitar in the process. He
spun over wildly, knowing that Zak was closing in.
The other scimitar was knocked from his hand.
treachery” Drizzt growled again. "Do you so hate to
lose?"
"Do you not understand?" Zak yelled back at him. "To lose
is to die! You may win a thousand fights, but you can only
lose one!" He put his sword in line with Drizzt's throat. It
would be a single clean blow. He knew that he should do it,
mercifully, before the masters of the Academy got hold of
his charge.
Zak sent his sword spinning across the room, and he
reached out with his empty hands, grabbed Drizzt by the
front of his shirt, and hoisted him to his feet.
They stood face-to-face, neither seeing the other very well
in the blinding glare, and neither able to break the tense silence.
After a long and breathless moment, the dweomer of
the enchanted pebble faded and the room became more
comfortable. lruly, the two dark elves looked upon each
other in a different light.
"A trick of Lloth's clerics” Zak explained. "Always they
keep such a spell of light at the ready” A strained smile
crossed his face as he tried to ease Drizzt's anger. " Although
I daresay that I have turned such light against clerics, even
high priestesses, more than a few times”
"Treachery” Drizzt spat a third time.
"It is our way” Zak replied. "You will learn”
"It is your way” snarled Drizzt. "You grin when you speak
of murdering clerics of the Spider Queen. Do you so enjoy
killing'? Killing drow?"
Zak could not find an answer to the accusing question.
Drizzt's words hurt him profoundly because they rang of
truth, and because Zak had come to view his penchant for
killing clerics of Lloth as a cowardly response to his own unanswerable
frustrations.
"You would have killed me” Drizzt said bluntly.
"But I did not” Zak retorted. "And now you live to go to the
Academy-to take a dagger in the back because you are
blind to the realities of our world, because you refuse to acknowledge
what your people are.
"Or you will become one of them” Zak growled. "Either
way, the Drizzt Do'Urden I have known will surely die”
Drizzt's face twisted, and he couldn't even find the words
to dispute the possibilities Zak was spitting at him. He felt
the blood drain from his face, though his heart raged. He
walked away, letting his glare linger on Zak for many steps.
"Go, then, Drizzt Do'Urden!" Zak cried after him. "Go to
the Academy and bask in the glory of your prowess. Remember,
though, the consequences of such skills. Always
there are consequences!'.'
Zak retreated to the security of his private chamber. The
door to the room closed behind the weapon master with
such a sound of finality that it spun Zak back to face its
empty stone.
"Go, then, Drizzt Do'Urden” he whispered in quiet lament.
"Go to the Academy and learn who you really are”
Dinin came for his brother early the next morning. Drizzt
slowly left the training room, looking back over his shoulder
every few steps to see if Zak would come out and attack
him again or bid him farewell.
He knew in his heart that Zak would not.
Drizzt had thought them friends, had believed that the
bond he and Zaknafein had sown went far beyond the simple
lessons and swordplay. The young drow had no answers
to the many questions spinning in his mind, and the person
who had been his teacher for the last five years had nothing
left to offer him.
"The heat grows in Narbondel” Dinin remarked when
they stepped out onto the balcony. "We must not be late for
your first day in the Academy”
Drizzt looked out into the myriad colors and shapes that
composed Menzoberranzan. "What is this place?" he whispered,
realizing how little he knew of his homeland beyond
the walls of his own house. Zak's words-Zak's ragepressed
in on Drizzt as he stood there, reminding him of his
ignorance and hinting at a dark path ahead.
"This is the world” Dinin replied, though Drizzt's question
had been rhetorical. "Do not worry, Secondboy” he
laughed, moving up onto the railing. "You will learn of Menzoberranzan
in the Academy. You will learn who you are
and who your people are”
The declaration unsettled Drizzt. Perhaps-remembering
his last bitter encounter with the drow he had most
trusted-that knowledge was exactly what he was afraid of.
He shrugged in resignation and followed Dinin over the
balcony in a magical descent to the compound floor: the
first steps down that dark path.
Another set of eyes watched intently as Dinin and Drizzt
started out from House Do'Urden.
Alton DeVir sat quietly against the side of a gigantic mushroom,
as he had every day for the last week, staring at the
Do'Urden complex.
Daermon N'a'shezbaernon, Ninth House of Menzoberranzan.
The house that had murdered his matron, his sisters
and brothers, and all there ever was of House DeVir . . . except
for Alton.
Alton thought back to the days of House DeVir, when Matron
Ginafae had gathered the family members together so
that they might discuss their aspirations. Alton, just a student
when House DeVir fell, now had a greater insight to
those times. Twenty years had brought a wealth of experience.
Ginafae had been the youngest matron among the ruling
families, and her potential had seemed unlimited. Then she
had aided a gnomish patrol, had used her Lloth-given
powers to hinder the drow elves that ambushed the little
people in the caverns outside Menzoberranzan-all because
Ginafae desired the death of a single member of that attacking
drow party, a wizard son of the city's third house, the
house labeled as House DeVir's next victim.
The Spider Queen took exception to Ginafae's choice of
weapons; deep gnomes were the dark elves' worst enemy in
the whole of the Underdark. With Ginafae fallen out of
Lloth's favor, House DeVir had been doomed.
Alton had spent twenty years trying to learn of his enemies,
trying to discover which drow family had taken ad.
vantage of his mother's mistake and had slaughtered his kin.
Threnty long years, and then his adopted matron, SiNafay
Hun'ett, had ended his quest as abruptly as it had begun.
Now, as Alton sat watching the guilty house, he knew only
one thing for certain: twenty years had done nothing to diminish
his rage.
Part 3
The Academy
The Academy.
It is the propagation of the lies that bind drow society together;
the ultimate perpetration of falsehoods repeated so
many times that they ring true against any contrary evidence.
The lessons young drow are taught of truth and justice
are so blatantly refuted by everyday life in wicked
Menzoberranzan that it is hard to understand how any
could believe them. Still they do.
Even now, decades removed, the thought of the place
frightens me, not for any physical pain or the ever-present
sense of possible death- I have trod down many roads
equally dangerous in that way. The Academy of Menzoberranzan
frightens me when I think of the survivors, the graduates,
existing-reveling-within the evil fabrications that
shape their world.
They live with the belief that anything is acceptable if you
can get away with it, that self-gratification is the most important
aspect of existence, and that power comes only to
she or he who is strong enough and cunning enough to
snatch it from the failing hands of those who no longer deserve
it. Compassion has no place in Menzoberranzan, and
yet it is compassion, not fear; that brings harmony to most
races. It is harmony, working toward shared goals, that precedes
greatness.
Lies engulf the drow in fear and mistrust, refute friendship
at the tip of a Lloth-blessed sword. The hatred and ambition
fostered by these amoral tenets are the doom of my
people, a weakness that they perceive as strength. The
result is a paralyzing, paranoid existence that the drow call
the edge of readiness.
I do not know how I survived the Academy; how I discovered
the falsehoods early enough to use them in contrast,
and thus strengthen, those ideals I most cherish.
It was-Zaknafein, I must believe, my teacher. Through the
experiences of Zak's long years, which embittered him and
cost him so much, I came to hear the screams: the screams
of protest against murderous treachery; the screams of
rage from the leaders of drow society; the high priestesses
of the Spider Queen, echoing down the paths of my mind,
ever to hold a place within my mind. The screams of dying
children.
-Drizzt Do'Urden
Chapter 12
This Enemy,"They"
Wearing the outfit of a noble son, and with a dagger concealed
in one boot-a suggestion from Dinin-Drizzt ascended
the wide stone stairway that led to Tier Breche, the
Academy of the drow. Drizzt reached the top and moved
between the giant pillars, under the impassive gazes of two
guards, last-year students of Melee-Magthere.
Three dozen other young drow milled about the Academy
compound, but Drizzt hardly noticed them. Three structures
dominated his vision and his thoughts. To his left stood
the pointed stalagmite tower of Sorcere, the school of wizardry.
Drizzt would spend the first sixth months of his tenth
and last year of study in there.
Before him, at the back of the level, loomed the most impressive
structure, Arach-Tinilith, the school of Lloth,
carved from the stone into the likeness of a giant spider. By
drow reckoning, this was the Academy's most important
building and thus was normally reserved for females. Male
students were housed within Arach-Tinilith only during
their last six months of study.
While Sorcere and Arach-Tinilith were the more graceful
structures, the most important building for Drizzt at that
tentative moment lined the wall to his right. The pyramidal
structure of Melee-Magthere, the school of fighters. This
building would be Drizzt's home for the next nine years. His
companions, he now realized, were those other dark elves
in the compound-fighters, like himself, about to begin
their formal training. The class, at twenty-five, was unusually
large for the school of fighters.
Even more unusual, several of the novice students were
nobles. Drizzt wondered how his skills would measure up
against theirs, how his sessions with Zaknafein compared to
the battles these others had no doubt fought with the
weapon masters of their respective families.
Those thoughts inevitably led Drizzt back to his last
encounter with his mentor. He quickly dismissed the memories
of that unpleasant duel, and, more pointedly, the disturbing
questions Zak's observations had forced him to
consider. There was no place for such doubts on this occasion.
Melee-Magthere loomed before him, the greatest test
and the greatest lesson of his young life.
"My greetings” came a voice behind him. Drizzt turned to
face a fellow novice, who wore a sword and dirk uncomfortably
on his belt and who appeared even more nervous
than Drizzt-a comforting sight.
"Kelnozz of House Kenafin, fifteenth house” the novice
said.
"Drizzt Do'Urden of Daermon N'a'shezbaernon, House
Do'Urden, Ninth House of Menzoberranzan” Drizzt replied
automatically, exactly as Matron Malice had instructed him.
"A noble” remarked Kelnozz, understanding the significance
of Drizzt bearing the same surname as his house.
Kelnozz dropped into a low bow. "I am honored by your
presence”
Drizzt was starting to like this place already. With the
treatment he normally received at home, he hardly thought
of himself as a noble. Any self-important notions that might
have occurred to him at Kelnozz's gracious greeting were
dispelled a moment later, though, when the masters came
out.
Drizzt saw his brother, Dinin, among them but
pretended-as Dinin had warned him to- not to notice, nor
to expect any special treatment. Drizzt rushed inside Melee-
Magthere along with the rest of the students when the
whips began to snap and the masters started shouting of the
dire consequences if they tarried. They were herded down
a few side corridors and into an oval room.
"Sit or stand as you will!" one of the masters growled. Noticing
two of the students whispering off to the side, the
master took his whip out and-crack/-took one of the offenders
off his feet.
Drizzt couldn't believe how quickly the room then came
to order.
"I am Hatch'net” the master began in a resounding voice,
"the master of Lore. This room will be your hall of instruction
for fifty cycles of Narbondel” He looked around at the
adorned belts on every figure. "You will bring no weapons
to this place!"
Hatch'net paced the perimeter of the room, making certain
that every eye followed his movements attentively. "You
are drow” he snapped suddenly. "Do you understand what
that means? Do you know where you come from, and the
history of our people? Menzoberranzan was not always our
home, nor was any other cavern of the Underdark. Once
we walked the surface of the world” He spun suddenly and
came up right in Drizzt's face.
"Do you know of the surface?" Master Hatch'net snarled.
Drizzt recoiled and shook his head.
"An awful place” Hatch'net continued, turning back to the
whole of the group. "Each day, as the glow begins its rise in
Narbondel, a great ball of fire rises into the open sky above,
bringing hours of a light greater than the punishing spells of
the priestesses of Lloth!" He held his arms outstretched,
with his eyes turned upward, and an unbelievable grimace
spread across his face.
Students' gasps rose up all about him.
"Even in the night, when the ball of fire has gone below
the far rim of the world” Hatch'net continued, weaving his
words as if he were telling a horror tale, "one cannot escape
the uncounted terrors of the surface. Reminders of what
the next day will bring, dots of light-and sometimes a
lesser ball of silvery fire-mar the sky's blessed darkness.
"Once our people walked the surface of the world” he repeated,
his tone now one of lament, "in ages long past, even
longer than the lines of the great houses. In that distant age,
we walked beside the pale-skinned elves, the faeries!"
"It cannot be true!" one student cried from the side.
Hatch'net looked at him earnestly, considering whether
more would be gained by beating the student for his
unasked. for interruption or by allowing the group to participate.
"It is!" he replied, choosing the latter course. "We
thought the faeries our friends; we called them kin! We
could not know, in our innocence, that they were the embodiments
of deceit and evil. We could not know that they
would turn on us suddenly and drive us from them, slaughtering
our children and the eldest of our race!
"Without mercy the evil faeries pursued us across the sur.
face world. Always we asked for peace, and always we
were answered by swords and killing arrows!"
He paused, his face twisting into a widening, malicious
smile. "Then we found the goddess!"
"Praise Lloth!" came one anonymous cry. Again Hatch'net
let the slip of tongue go by unpunished, knowing that every
accenting comment only drew his audience deeper into his
web of rhetoric.
"Indeed” the master replied. "All praise to the Spider
Queen. It was she who took our orphaned race to her side
and helped us fight off our enemies. It was she who guided
the forematrons of our race to the paradise of the Underdark.
It is she” he roared, a clenched fist rising into the air,
"who now gives us the strength and the magic to pay back
our enemies.
"We are the drow!" Hatch'net cried. "You are the drow,
never again to be downtrodden, rulers of all you desire,
conquerors of lands you choose to inhabit!"
"The surface?" came a question.
"The surface?" echoed Hatch'net with a laugh. "Who
would want to return to that vile place? Let the faeries have
it! Let them burn under the fires of the open sky! We claim
the Underdark, where we can feel the core of the world
thrumming under our feet, and where the stones of the
walls show the heat of the world's power!"
Drizzt sat silent, absorbing every word of-the talented orator's
often-rehearsed speech. Drizzt was caught, as were
all the new students, in Hatch'net's hypnotic variations of inflection
and rallying cries. Hatch'net had been the master of
Lore at the Academy for more than two centuries, owning
more prestige in Menzoberranzan than nearly any other
male drow, and many of the females. The matrons of the
ruling families understood well the value of his practiced
tongue.
So it went every day, an endless stream of hate rhetoric directed
against an enemy that none of the students had ever
seen. The surface elves were not the only target of
Hatch'net's sniping. Dwarves, gnomes, humans, halflings,
and all of the surface races-and even subterranean races
such as the duergar dwarves, which the drow often traded
with and fought beside-each found an unpleasant spot in
the master's ranting.
Drizzt came to understand why no weapons were permitted
in the oval chamber. When he left his lesson each day, he
found his hands clenched by his sides in rage, unconsciously
grasping for a scimitar hilt. It was obvious from the
commonplace fights among the students that others felt the
same way. Always, though, the overriding factor that kept
some measure of control was the master's lie of the horrors
of the outside world and the comforting bond of the stu.
dents' common heritage-a heritage, the students would
soon come to believe, that gave them enough enemies to
battle beyond each other.
The long, draining hours in the oval chamber left little
time for the students to mingle. They shared common barracks,
but their extensive duties outside of Hatch'net's
lessons-serving the older students and masters, preparing
meals, and cleaning the building-gave them barely enough
time for rest. By the end of the first week, they walked on
the edge of exhaustion, a condition, Drizzt realized, that
only increased the stirring effect of Master Hatch'net's les
sons.
Drizzt accepted the existence stoically, considering it far
better than the six years he had served his mother and sisters
as page prince. Still, there was one great disappointment
to Dnzzt in his first weeks at Melee-Magthere. He
found himself longing for his practice sessions.
He sat on the edge of his bedroll late one night, holding a
scimitar up before his shining eyes, remembering those
many hours engaged in battle-play with Zaknafein.
"We go to the lesson in two hours” Kelnozz, in the next
bunk, reminded him. "Get some rest”
"I feel the edge leaving my hands” Drizzt replied quietly.
"The blade feels heavier, unbalanced”
"The grand melee is barely ten cycles of Narbondel away”
Kelnozz said. "You will get all the practice you desire there!
Fear not, whatever edge has been dulled by the days with
the master of Lore will soon be regained. For the next nine
years, that fine blade of yours will rarely leave your hands!"
Drizzt slid the scimitar back into its scabbard and reclined
on his bunk. As with so many aspects of his life so far-and,
he was beginning to fear, with so many aspects of his future
in Menzoberranzan-he had no choice but to accept the circumstances
of his existence.
"This segment of your training is at an end” Master
Hatch'net announced on the morning of the fiftieth day. Another
master, Dinin, entered the room, leading a magically
suspended iron box filled with meagerly padded wooden
poles of every length and design comparable to drow weapons.
"Choose the sparring pole that most resembles your own
weapon of choice” Hatch'net explained as Dinin made his
way around the room. He came to his brother, and Drizzt's
eyes settled at once on his choice: two slightly curving poles
about three-and-a-half feet long. Drizzt lifted them out and
put them through a simple cut. Their weight and balance
closely resembled the scimitars that had become so familiar
to his hands.
"For the pride of Daermon N'a'shezbaernon” Dinin whispered,
then moved along.
Drizzt twirled the mock weapons again. It was time to
measure the value of his sessions with Zak.
"Your class must have an order” Hatch'net was saying as
Drizzt turned his attention beyond the scope of his new
weapons. "Thus the grand melee. Remember, there can be
only one victor!"
Hatch'net and Dinin herded the students out of the oval
chamber and out of Melee-Magthere altogether, down the
tunnel between the two guardian spider statues at the back
of Tier Breche. For all of the students, this was the first time
they had ever been out of Menzoberranzan.
"What are the rules?" Drizzt asked Kelnozz, in line at his
side.
"If a master calls you out, then you are out” Kelnozz replied.
"The rules of engagement?" asked Drizzt.
Kelnozz cast him an incredulous glance. "Win” he said
simply, as though there could be no other answer.
A short time later they came into a fairly large cavern, the
arena for the grand melee. Pointed stalactites leered down
at them from the ceiling and stalagmite mounds broke the
floor into a twisting maze filled with ambush holes and
blind corners.
"Choose your strategies and find your starting point”
Master Hatch'net said to them. "The grand melee begins in a
count of one hundred!"
The twenty-five students set off into action, some pausing
to consider the landscape laid out before them, others
sprinting off into the gloom of the maze.
Drizzt decided to find a narrow corridor, to ensure that
he would fight off one-against-one, and he just started off in
his search when he was grabbed from behind.
"A team?" Kelnozz offered.
Drizzt did not respond, unsure of the other's fighting
worth and the accepted practices of this traditional encounter.
"Others are forming into teams” Kelnozz pressed. "Some
in threes. Together we might have a chance”
"The master said there could be only one victor” Drizzt
reasoned.
"Who better than you, if not me” Kelnozz replied with a
sly wink. "Let us defeat the others, then we can decide the
issue between ourselves”
The reasoning seemed prudent, and with Hatch'net's
count already approaching seventy-five, Drizzt had little
time to ponder the possibilities. He clapped Kelnozz on the
shoulder and led his new ally into the maze.
Catwalks had been constructed all around the room's perimeter,
even crossing through the center of the chamber,
to give the judging masters a good view of all the action below.
A dozen of them were up there now, all eagerly awaiting
the first battles so that they might measure the talent of
this young class.
"One hundred!" cried Hatch'net from his high perch.
Kelnozz began to move, but Drizzt stopped him, keeping
him back in the narrow corridor between two long stalagmite
mounds.
"Let them come to us” Drizzt signaled in the silent hand
and facial expression code. He crouched in battle readiness.
"Let them fight each other to weariness. Patience is our
ally!"
Kelnozz relaxed, thinking he had made a good choice in
Drizzt.
Their patience was not tested severely, though, for a moment
later, a tall and aggressive student burst into their defensive
position, wielding a long spear-shaped pole. He
came right in on Drizzt, slapping with the butt of his
weapon, then spinning it over full in a brutal thrust designed
for a quick kill, a strong move perfectly executed.
Drizzt, though, it seemed the most basic of attack
routines-too basic, almost, for Drizzt hardly believed that
a trained student would attack another skilled fighter in
such a straightforward manner. Drizzt convinced himself in
time that this was indeed the chosen method of attack, and
no feint, and he launched the proper parry. His scimitar
poles spun counterclockwise in front of him, striking the
thrusting spear in succession and driving the weapon's tip
harmlessly above the striking line of its wielder's shoulder.
The aggressive attacker, stunned by the advanced parry,
found himself open and off balance. Barely a split second
later, before the attacker could even begin to recover,
Drizzt's counter poked one, then the other scimitar pole
into his chest.
A soft blue light appeared on the stunned student's face,
and he and Drizzt followed its line up to see a wandwielding
master looking down at them from the catwalk.
"You are defeated” the master said to the tall student. "Fall
where you stand!"
The student shot an angry glare at Drizzt and obediently
dropped to the stone.
"Come” Drizzt said to Kelnozz, casting a glance up at the
master's revealing light. "Any others in the area will know
of our position now. We must seek a new defensible area”
Kelnozz paused a moment to watch the graceful hunting
strides of his comrade. He had indeed made a good choice in
selecting Drizzt, but he knew already, after only a single
quick encounter, that if he and this skilled swordsman were
the last two standing-a distinct possibility-he would have
no chance at all of claiming victory.
Together they rushed around a blind corner, right into
two opponents. Kelnozz chased after one, who fled in
fright, and Drizzt faced off against the other, who wielded
sword and dirk poles.
A wide smile of growing confidence crossed Drizzt's face
as his opponent took the offensive, launching routines similarly
basic to those of the spear wielder that Drizzt had easily
dispatched.
A few deft twists and turns of his scimitars, a few slaps on
the inside edges of his opponent's weapons, had the sword
and dirk flying wide. Drizzt's attack came right up the middle,
where he executed another double-poke into his opponent's
chest.
The expected blue light appeared. "You are defeated”
came the master's call. "Fall where you stand”
Outraged, the stubborn student chopped viciously at
Drizzt. Drizzt blocked with one weapon and snapped the
other against his attacker's wrist, sending the sword pole
flying to the floor.
The attacker clenched his bruised wrist, but that was the
least of his troubles. A blinding flash of lightning exploded
from the observing master's wand, catching him full in the
chest and hurtling him ten feet backward to crash into a
stalagmite mound. He crumpled to the floor, groaning in agony,
and a line of glowing heat rose from his scorched body,
which lay against the cool gray stone.
"You are defeated!" the master said again.
Drizzt started to the fallen drow's aid, but the master issued
an emphatic, "No!"
Then Kelnozz was back at Drizzt's side. "He got away”
Kelnozz began, but he broke into a laugh when he saw the
downed student. "If a master calls you out, then you are
out!" Kelnozz repeated into Drizzt's blank stare.
"Come” Kelnozz continued. "The battle is in full now. Let
us find some fun! "
Drizzt thought his companion quite cocky for one who
had yet to lift his weapons. He only shrugged and followed.
Their next encounter was not so easy. They came into a
double passage turning in and out of several rock formations
and found themselves faced off against a group of
three-nobles from leading houses, both Drizzt and
Kelnozz realized.
Drizzt rushed the two on his left, both of whom wielded
single swords, while Kelnozz worked to fend off the third.
Drizzt had little experience against multiple opponents, but
Zak had taught him the techniques of such a battle quite
well. His movements were solely defensive at first, then he
settled into a comfortable rhythm and allowed his opponents
to tire themselves out, and to make the critical mistakes.
These were cunning foes, though, and familiar with each
other's movements. Their attacks complemented each
other, slicing in at Drizzt from widely opposing angles.
"Two-hands” Zak had once called Drizzt, and now he lived
up to the title. His scimitars worked independently, yet in
perfect harmony, foiling every attack.
From a nearby perch on the catwalk, Masters Hatch'net
and Dinin looked on, Hatch'net more than a little impressed,
and Dinin swelling with pride.
Drizzt saw the frustration mounting on his opponents'
faces, and he knew that his opportunity to strike would
soon be at hand. Then they crossed up, coming in together
with identical thrusts, their sword poles barely inches
apart.
Drizzt spun to the side and launched a blinding uppercut
slice with his left scimitar, deflecting both attacks. Then he
reversed his body's momentum, dropped to one knee, back
in line with his opponents, and thrust in low with two snaps
of his free right arm. His jabbing scimitar pole caught the
first, and then the second, squarely in the groin.
They dropped their weapons in unison, clutched their
bruised parts, and slumped to their knees. Drizzt leaped up
before them, trying to find the words for an apology.
Hatch'net nodded his approval at Dinin as the two masters
set their lights on the two losers.
"Help me!" Kelnozz cried from beyond the dividing wall of
stalagmites.
Drizzt dove into a roll through a break in the wall, came
up quickly, and downed a fourth opponent, who was concealed
for a back-stab surprise, with a backhand chop to the
chest. Drizzt stopped to consider his latest victim. He hadn't
even consciously known that the drow was there, but his
aim had been perfect!
Hatch'net blew a low whistle as he shifted his light to the
most recent loser's face. "He is good!" the master breathed.
Drizzt saw Kelnozz a short distance away, practically
forced down to his back by his opponent's skilled maneuvers.
Drizzt leaped between the two and deflected an attack
that surely would have finished Kelnozz.
This newest opponent, wielding two sword poles, proved
Drizzt's toughest challenge yet. He came at Drizzt with complicated
feints and twists, forcing him on his heels more
than once.
"Berg'inyon of House Baenre” Hatch'net whispered to
Dinin. Dinin understood the significance and hoped that his
young brother was up to the test.
Berg'inyon was not a disappointment to his distinguished
kin. His moves came skilled and measured, and he and
Drizzt danced about for many minutes with neither finding
any advantage. The daring Berg'inyon then came in with
the attack routine perhaps most familiar to Drizzt: the
double-thrust low.
Drizzt executed the cross-down to perfection, the appropriate
parry as Zaknafein had so pointedly proved to him.
Never satisfied, though, Drizzt then reacted on an impulse,
agilely snapping a foot up between the hilts of his crossed
blades and into his opponent's face. The stunned son of
House Baenre fell back against the wall.
"I knew the parry was wrong!" Drizzt cried, already savoring
the next time he would get the opportunity to foil the
double-thrust low in a session against Zak.
"He is good” Hatch'net gasped again to his glowing companion.
Dazed, Berg'inyon could not fight his way out of the disadvantage.
He put a globe of darkness around himself, but
Drizzt waded right in, more than willing to fight blindly.
Drizzt put the son of House Baenre through a quick series
of attacks, ending with one of Drizzt's scimitar poles against
Berg'inyon's exposed neck.
"I am defeated” the young Baenre conceded, feeling the
pole. Hearing the call, Master Hatch'net dispelled the darkness.
Berg'inyon set both his weapons on the stone and
slumped down, and the blue light appeared on his face.
Drizzt couldn't hold back the widening grin. Were there
any here that he could not defeat? he wondered.
Drizzt then felt an explosion on the back of his head that
dropped him to his knees. He managed to look back in time
to see Kelnozz walking away.
"A fool” Hatch'net chuckled, putting his light on Drizzt,
then turning his gaze upon Dinin. " A good fool”
Dinin crossed his arms in front of his chest, his face glowing
brightly now in a flush of embarrassment and anger.
Drizzt felt the cool stone against his cheek, but his only
thoughts at that moment were rooted in the past, locked
onto Zaknafein's sarcastic, but painfully accurate, statement:
"It is our way!"
Chapter 13
The Price of Winning
"You deceived me” Drizzt said to Kelnozz that night in the
barracks. The room was black around them and no other Students
stirred in their cots, exhausted from the day's fighting
and from their endless duties serving the older students.
Kelnozz fully expected this encounter. He had guessed
Drizzt's naivete early on, when Drizzt had actually queried
him about the rules of engagement. An experienced drow
warrior, particularly a noble, should have known better,
should have understood that the only rule of his existence
was the pursuit of victory. Now, Kelnozz knew I this foolish
young Do'Urden would not strike at him for his earlier
actions-vengeance fueled by anger was not one of Drizzt's
traits.
"Why?" Drizzt pressed, finding no answer forthcoming
from the smug commoner of House Kenafin.
The volume of Drizzt's voice caused Kelnozz to glance
around nervously. They were supposed to be sleeping; if a
master heard them arguing. . .
"What is the mystery?" Kelnozz signaled back in the hand
code, the warmth of his fingers glowing clearly to Drizzt's
heat-sensing eyes. "I acted as I had to act, though I now believe
I should have held off a bit longer. Perhaps, if you had
defeated a few more, I might have finished higher than
third in the class”
"If we had worked together, as we had agreed, you might
have won, or finished second at the least” Drizzt signaled
back, the sharp movements of his hands reflecting his anger.
"Most assuredly second” Kelnozz replied. "I knew from
the beginning that I would be no match for you. You are the
finest swordsman I have ever seen”
"Not by the masters' standing” Drizzt grumbled aloud.
Eighth is not so low” Kelnozz whispered back.
Berg'inyon is only ranked tenth, and he is from the ruling
house of Menzoberranzan. You should be glad that your
standing is not to be envied by your classmates” A shuffle
outside the room's door sent Kelnozz back into the silent
mode. "Holding a higher rank means only that I have more
fighters eyeing my back as a convenient place to rest their
daggers”
Drizzt let the implications of Kelnozz's statement slip by;
he refused to consider such treachery in the Academy.
"Berg'inyon was the finest fighter I saw in the grand melee”
he signaled. "He had you beaten until I interceded on your
behalf “
Kelnozz smiled the thought away. "Let Berg'inyon serve as
cook in some lowly house for alii care” he whispered even
more quietly than before-for the son of House Baenre's
bunk was only a few yards away. "He is tenth, yet I, Kelnozz
of Kenafin, am third!"
"I am eighth” said Drizzt, an uncharacteristic edge on his
voice, more anger than jealousy, "but I could defeat you
with any weapon”
Kelnozz shrugged, a strangely blurring movement to onlookers
seeing in the infrared spectrum. "You did not” he
signaled. "I won our encounter”
"Encounter?" Drizzt gasped. "You deceived me, that is all!"
"Who was left standing?" Kelnozz pointedly reminded
him. "Who wore the blue light of a master's wand?"
"Honor demands that there be rules of engagement”
growled Drizzt.
"There is a rule” Kelnozz snapped back at him. "You may
do whatever you can get away with. I won our encounter,
Drizzt Do'Urden, and I hold the higher rank! That is all that
matters!"
In the heat of the argument, their voices had grown too
loud. The door to the room swung wide, and a master
stepped onto the threshold, his form vividly outlined by the
hallway's blue lights. Both students promptly rolled over
and closed their eyes-and their mouths.
The finality of Kelnozz's last statement rocked Drizzt to
some prudent observations. He realized then that his
friendship with Kelnozz had come to an end-and, perhaps,
that he and Kelnozz had never been friends at all.
"You have seen him?" Alton asked, his fingers tapping anxiously
on the small table in the highest chamber of his private
quarters. Alton had set the younger students of
Sorcere to work repairing the blasted place, but the scorch
marks on the stone walls remained, a legacy of Alton's fireball.
"I have” replied Masoj. "I have heard of his skill with
weapons”
"Eighth in his class after the grand melee” said Alton, "a
fine achievement”
"By all accounts, he has the prowess to be first” said Masoj.
"One day he will claim that title. I shall be careful
around that one”
"He will never live to claim it!" Alton promised. "House
Do'Urden puts great pride in this purple-eyed youth, and
thus 1 have decided upon Drizzt as my first target for revenge.
His death will bring pain to that treacherous Matron
Malice!"
Masoj saw a problem here and decided to put it to rest
once and for all. "You will not harm him” he warned Alton.
"You will not even go near him”
Alton's tone became no less grim. "I have waited two
decades-" he began.
"You can wait a few more” Masoj snapped back. "I remind
you that you accepted Matron SiNafay's invitation into
House Hun'ell. Such an alliance requires obedience. Matron
SiNafay-our matron mother-has placed upon my shoulders
the task of handling Drizzt Do'Urden, and I will execute
her will”
Alton rested back in his seat across the table and put what
was left of his acid-torn chin into a slender palm, carefully
weighing the words of his secret partner.
"Matron SiNafay has plans that will bring you all the revenge
you could possibly desire” Masoj continued. "I warn
you now, Alton DeVir” he snarled, emphasizing the surname
that was not Hun'ett, "that if you begin a war with
House Do'Urden, or even put them on the defensive with
any act of violence unsanctioned by Matron SiNafay, you
will incur the wrath of House Hun'ett. Matron SiNafay will
expose you as a murderous imposter and will exact every
punishment allowable by the ruling council upon your pitiful
bones!"
Alton had no way to refute the threat. He was a rogue,
without family beyond the adopted Hun'etts. If SiNafay
turned against him, he would find no allies. "What plan does
SiNafay . . . Matron SiNafay . . . have for House Do'Urden?"
he asked calmly. "Tell me of my revenge so that I may survive
these torturous years of waiting”
Masoj knew that he had to act carefully at this point. His
mother had not forbidden him to tell Alton of the future
course of action, but if she had wanted the volatile DeVir to
know, Masoj realized, she would have told him herself.
"Let us just say that House Do'Urden's power has grown,
and continues to grow, to the point where it has become a
very real threat to all the great houses” Masoj purred, loving
the intrigue of positioning before a war. "Witness the fall
of House DeVir, perfectly executed with no obvious trail.
Many of Menzoberranzan's nobles would rest easier if . . . "
He let it go at that, deciding that he probably had said too
much already.
By the hot glimmer in Alton's eyes, Masoj could tell that
the lure had been strong enough to buy Alton's patience.
The Academy held many disappointments for young
Drizzt, particularly in that first year, when so many of the
dark realities of drow society, realities that Zaknafein had
barely hinted at, remained on the edges of Drizzt's cognizance
with stubborn resilience. He weighed the masters'
lectures of hatred and mistrust in both hands, one side holding
the masters' views in the context of the lectures, the
other bending those same words into the very different
logic assumed by his old mentor. The truth seemed so ambiguous,
so hard to define. Through all of the examination,
Drizzt found that he could not escape one pervading fact: In
his entire young life, the only treachery he had ever
witnessed-and so often!-was at the hands of drow elves.
The physical training of the Academy, hours on end of dueling
exercises and stealth techniques, was more to Drizzt's
liking. Here, with his weapons so readily in his hands, he
freed himself of the disturbing questions of truth and perceived
truth.
Here he excelled. If Drizzt had come into the Academy
with a higher level of training and expertise than that of his
classmates, the gap grew only wider as the grueling months
passed. He learned to look beyond the accepted defense and
attack routines put forth by the masters and create his own
methods, innovations that almost always at least equaledand
usually outdid-the standard techniques.
At first, Dinin listened with increasing pride as his peers
exalted in his younger brother's fighting prowess. So glowing
came the compliments that the eldest son of Matron
Malice soon took on a nervous wariness. Dinin was the
elderboy of House Do'Urden, a title he had gained by eliminating
Nalfein. Drizzt, showing the potential to become one
of the finest swordsmen in all of Menzoberranzan, was now
the secondboy of the house, eyeing, perhaps, Dinin's title.
Similarly, Drizzt's fellow students did not miss the growing
brilliance of his fighting dance. Often they viewed it too
close for their liking! They looked upon Drizzt with seething
jealousy, wondering if they could ever measure up
against his whirling scimitars. Pragmatism was ever a
strong trait in drow elves. These young students had spent
the bulk of their years observing the elders of their families
twisting every situation into a favorable light. Everyone of
them recognized the value of Drizzt Do'Urden as an ally,
and thus, when the grand melee came around the next year,
Drizzt was inundated with offers of partnership.
The most surprising query came from Kelnozz of House
Kenafin, who had downed Drizzt through deceit the previous
year. "Do we join again, this time to the very top of the
class?" the haughty young fighter asked as he moved beside
Drizzt down the tunnel to the prepared cavern. He moved
around and stood before Drizzt easily, as if they were the
best of friends, his forearms resting across the hilts of his
belted weapons and an overly friendly smile spread across
his face.
Dnzzt could not even answer. He turned and walked
away, pointedly keeping his eye over one shoulder as he
left.
"Why are you so amazed?" Kelnozz pressed, stepping
quickly to keep up.
Drizzt spun on him. "How could I join again with one who
so deceived me?" he snarled. "I have not forgotten your
trick!"
"That is the point” Kelnozz argued. "You are more wary
this year; certainly I would be a fool to attempt such a move
again!"
"How else could you win?" said Drizzt. "You cannot defeat
me in open battle” His words were not a boast, just a fact
that Kelnozz accepted as readily as Drizzt.
"Second rank is highly honored” Kelnozz reasoned.
Drizzt glared at him. He knew that Kelnozz would not settle
for anything less than ultimate victory. "If we meet in the
melee” he said with cold finality, "it will be as opponents” He
walked off again, and this time Kelnozz did not follow.
Luck bestowed a measure of justice upon Drizzt that day,
for his first opponent, and first victim, in the grand melee
was none other than his former partner. Drizzt found
Kelnozz in the same corridor they had used as a defensible
starting point the previous year and took him down with his
very first attack combination. Drizzt somehow managed to
hold back on his winning thrust, though he truly wanted to
jab his scimitar pole into Kelnozz's ribs with all his strength.
Then Drizzt was off into the shadows, picking his way
carefully until the numbers of surviving students began to
dwindle. With his reputation, Drizzt had to be extra wary,
for his classmates recognized a common advantage in eliminating
one of his prowess early in the competition. Working
alone, Drizzt had to fully scope out every battle before he
engaged, to ensure that each opponent had no secret companions
lurking nearby.
This was Drizzt's arena, the place where he felt most
comfortable, and he was up to the challenge. In two hours,
only five competitors remained, and after another two
hours of cat and mouse, it came down to only two: Drizzt
and Berg'inyon Baenre.
Drizzt moved out into an open stretch of the cavern.
"Come out, then, student Baenre!" he called. "Let us settle
this challenge openly and with honor!"
Watching from the catwalk, Dinin shook his head in disbelief.
"He has relinquished all advantage” said Master Hatch'net,
standing beside the elderboy of House Do'Urden. " As
the better swordsman, he had Berg'inyon worried and unsure
of his moves. Now your brother stands out in the open,
showing his position”
"Still a fool” Dinin muttered.
Hatch'net spotted Berg'inyon slipping behind a stalagmite
mound a few yards behind Drizzt. "It should be settled
soon”
"Are you afraid?" Drizzt yelled into the gloom. "If you
truly deserve the top rank, as you freely boast, then come
out and face me openly. Prove your words, Berg'inyon
Baenre, or never speak them again!"
The expected rush of motion from behind sent Drizzt into
a sidelong roll.
"Fighting is more than swordplay!" the son of House
Baenre cried as he came on, his eyes gleaming at the advantage
he now seemed to hold.
Berg'inyon stumbled then, tripped up by a wire Drizzt
had set out, and fell flat to his face. Drizzt was on him in a
flash, scimitar pole tip in at Berg'inyon's throat.
"So I have learned” Drizzt replied grimly.
"Thus a Do'Urden becomes the champion” Hatch'net observed,
putting his blue light on the face of House Baenre's
defeated son. Hatch'net then stole Dinin's widening smile
with a prudent reminder: "Elderboys should beware secondboys
with such skills”
While Drizzt took little pride in his victory that second
year, he took great satisfaction in the continued growth of
his fighting skills. He practiced every waking hour when he
was not busy in the many serving duties of a young student.
Those duties were reduced as the years passed-the youngest
students were worked the hardest-and Drizzt found
more and more time in private training. He reveled in the
dance of his blades and the harmony of his movements. His
scimitars became his only friends, the only things he dared
to trust.
He won the grand melee again the third year, and the year
after that, despite the conspiracies of many others against
him. To the masters, it became obvious that none in Drizzt's
class would ever defeat him, and the next year they placed
him into the grand melee of students three years his senior.
He won that one, too.
The Academy, above anything else in Menzoberranzan,
was a structured place, and though Drizzt's advanced skill
defied that structure in terms of battle prowess, his tenure
as a student would not be lessened. As a fighter, he would
spend ten years in the Academy, not such a long time considering
the thirty years of study a wizard endured in Sorcere,
or the fifty years a budding priestess would spend in
Arach- Tinilith. While fighters began their training at the
young age of twenty, wizards could not start until their
twenty-fifth birthday, and clerics had to wait until the age
of forty.
The first four years in Melee-Magthere were devoted to
singular combat, the handling of weapons. In this, the masters
could teach Drizzt little that Zaknafein had not already
shown him.
After that, though, the lessons became more involved.
The young drow warriors spent two full years learning
group fighting tactics with other warriors, and the subsequent
three years incorporated those tactics into warfare
techniques beside, and against, wizards and clerics.
The final year of the Academy rounded out the fighters'
education. The first six months were spent in Sorcere,
learning the basics of magic use, and the last six, the prelude
to graduation, saw the fighters in tutelage under the priestesses
of Arach- Tinilith.
All the while there remained the rhetoric, the hammering
in of those precepts that the Spider Queen held so dear,
those lies of hatred that held the drow in a state of controllable
chaos.
Drizzt, the Academy became a personal challenge, a
private classroom within the impenetrable womb of his
whirling scimitars. Inside the adamantite walls he formed
with those blades, Drizzt found he could ignore the many
injustices he observed all around him, and could somewhat
insulate himself against words that would have poisoned his
heart. The Academy was a place of constant ambition and
deceit, a breeding ground for the ravenous, consuming
hunger for power that marked the life of all the drow.
Drizzt would survive it unscathed, he promised himself.
As the years passed, though, as the battles began to take
on the edge of brutal reality, Drizzt found himself caught up
time and again in the heated throes of situations he could
not so easily brush away.
Chapter 14
Proper Respect
They moved through the winding tunnels as quietly as a
whispering breeze, each step measured in stealth and ending
in an alert posture. They were ninth-year students
working on their last year in Melee-Magthere, and they operated
as often outside the cavern of Menzoberranzan as
within. No longer did padded poles adorn their belts; adamantite
weapons hung there now, finely forged and cruelly
edged.
At times, the tunnels closed in around them, barely wide
enough for one dark elf to squeeze through. Other times,
the students found themselves in huge caverns with walls
and ceilings beyond their sight. They were drow warriors,
trained to operate in any type of Underdark landscape and
learned in the ways of any foe they might encounter.
"Practice patrols” Master Hatch'net had called these
drills, though he had warned the students that "practice patrols"
often met monsters quite real and unfriendly.
Drizzt, still rated in the top of his class and in the point position,
led this group, with Master Hatch'net and ten other
students following in formation behind. Only twenty-two of
the original twenty-five in Drizzt's class remained. One had
been dismissed-and subsequently executed-for a foiled
assassination attempt on a higher-ranking student, a second
had been killed in the practice arena, and a third had died in
his bunk of natural causes-for a dagger in the heart quite
naturally ends one's life.
In another tunnel a short distance away, Berg'inyon
Baenre, holding the class's second rank, led Master Dinin
and the other half of the class in a similar exercise.
Day after day, Driztt and the others had struggled to keep
the fine edge of readiness. In three months of these mock
patrols, the group had encountered only one monster, a
cave fisher, a nasty crablike denizen of the Underdark. Even
that conflict had provided only brief excitement, and no
practical experience, for the cave fisher had slipped out
along the high ledges before the drow patrol could even get
a strike at it.
This day, Drizzt sensed something different. Perhaps it
was an unusual edge on Master Hatch'net's voice or a tingling
in the stones of the cavern, a subtle vibration that
hinted to Drizzt's subconscious of other creatures in the
maze of tunnels. Whatever the reason, Drizzt knew enough
to follow his instincts, and he was not surprised when the
telltale glow of a heat source flitted down a side passage on
the periphery of his vision. He signaled for the rest of the
patrol to halt, then quickly climbed to a perch on a tiny
ledge above the side passage's exit.
When the intruder emerged into the main tunnel, he
found himself lying back.down on the floor with two scimi.
tar blades crossed over his neck. Drizzt backed away imme.
diately when he recognized his victim as another drow
student.
"What are you doing down here?" Master Hatch'net de.
manded of the intruder. "You know that the tunnels outside
Menzoberranzan are not to be traveled by any but the pa.
trols!"
"Your pardon, Master” the student pleaded. "I bring news
of an alert”
All in the patrol crowded around, but Hatch'net backed
them off with a glare and ordered Drizzt to set them out in
defensive positions.
"A child is missing” the student went on, "a princess of
House Baenre! Monsters have been spotted in the tunnels!"
"What sort of monsters?" Hatch'net asked. A loud clacking
noise, like the sound of two stones being clapped together,
answered his question.
"Hook horrors!" Hatch'net signaled to Drizzt at his side.
Drizzt had never seen such beasts, but he had learned
enough about them to understand why Master Hatch'net
had suddenly reverted to the silent hand code. Hook horrors
hunted through a sense of hearing more acute than
that of any other creature in all the Underdark. Drizzt immediately
relayed the signal around to the others, and they
held absolutely quiet for instructions from the master. This
was the situation they had trained to handle for the last nine
years of their lives, and only the sweat on their palms belied
the calm readiness of these young drow warriors.
"Spells of darkness will not foil hook horrors” Hatch'net
signaled to his troops. "Nor will these” He indicated the pistol
crossbow in his hand and the poison-tipped dart it held, a
common first-strike weapon of the dark elves. Hatch'net
put the crossbow away and drew his slender sword.
"You must find a gap in the creature's bone armor” he reminded
the others, "and slip your weapon through to the
flesh” He tapped Drizzt on the shoulder, and they started
off together, the other students falling into line behind
them.
The clacking resounded clearly, but, echoing off the stone
walls of the tunnels, it provided a confusing beacon for the
hunting drow. Hatch'net let Drizzt steer their course and
was impressed by the way the student soon discerned the
pattern of the echo riddle. Drizzt's step came in confidence,
though many of the others in the patrol glanced about anxiously
unsure of the peril's direction or distance.
Then a singular sound froze them all where they stood,
cutting through the din of the clacking monsters and resounding
again and again, surrounding the patrol in the
echoing madness of a terrifying wail. It was the scream of a
child.
"Princess of House Baenre!" Hatch'net signaled to Drizzt.
The master started to order his troops into a battle formation,
but Drizzt didn't wait to watch the commands. The
scream had sent a shudder of revulsion through his spine,
and when it sounded again, it lighted angry fires in his lavender
eyes.
Drizzt sprinted off down the tunnel, the cold metal of his
scimitars leading the way.
Hatch'net organized the patrol into quick pursuit. He
hated the thought of losing a student as skilled as Drizzt, but
he considered, too, the benefits of Drizzt's rash actions. If
the others watched the finest of their class die in an act of
stupidity, it would be a lesson they would not soon forget.
Drizzt cut around a sharp corner and down a straight expanse
of narrow, broken walls. He heard no echoes now,
just the ravenous clacking of the waiting monsters and the
muffled cries of the child.
His keen ears caught the slight sounds of his patrol at his
back, and he knew that if he was able to hear them, the
hook horrors surely could. Drizzt would not relinquish the
passion or the immediacy of his quest. He climbed to a ledge
ten feet above the floor, hoping it would run the length of
the corridor- When he slipped around a final bend, he could
barely distinguish the heat of the monsters' forms through
the blurring coolness of their bony exoskeletons, shells
nearly equal in temperature to the surrounding stone.
He made out five of the giant beasts, two pressed against
the stone and guarding the corridor and three others farther
back, in a little cul-de-sac, toying with some-cryingobject.
Drizzt mustered his nerve and continued along the ledge,
using all the stealth he had ever learned to creep by the sentries.
Then he saw the child princess, lying in a broken heap
at the foot of one of the monstrous bipeds. The motion of
her sobs told Drizzt that she was alive. Drizzt had no intention
of engaging the monsters if he could help it, hoping that
he might perhaps slip in and steal the child away.
Then the patrol came headlong around the bend in the
corridor, forcing Drizzt to action.
"Sentries!" he screamed in warning, probably saving the
lives of the first four of the group. Drizzt's attention
abruptly returned to the wounded child as one of the hook
horrors raised its heavy, clawed foot to crush her.
The beast stood nearly twice Drizzt's height and outweighed
him more than five times over. It was fully armored
in the hard shell of its exoskeleton and adorned with
gigantic clawed hands and a long and powerful beak. Three
of the monsters stood between Drizzt and the child.
Drizzt couldn't care about any of those details at that horrible,
critical moment. His fears for the child outweighed
any concern for the danger looming before him. He was a
drow warrior, a fighter trained and outfitted for battle,
while the child was helpless and defenseless.
Two of the hook horrors rushed at the ledge, just the
break Drizzt needed. He rose up to his feet and leaped out
over them, coming down in a fighting blur onto the side of
the remaining hook horror. The monster lost all thoughts of
the child as Drizzt's scimitars snapped in at its beak relentlessly,
cracking into its facial armor in a desperate search
for an opening.
The hook horror fell back, overwhelmed by its opponent's
fury and unable to catch up to the blades' blinding,
stinging movements.
Drizzt knew that he had the advantage on this one, but he
knew, as well, that two others would soon be at his back. He
did not relent. He slid down from his perch on the monster's
side and rolled around to block its retreat, dropping between
its stalagmitelike legs and tripping it to the stone.
Then he was on top of it, poking furiously as it floundered
on its belly.
The hook horror desperately tried to respond, but its armored
shell was too encumbering for it to twist out from
under the assault.
Drizzt knew his own situation was even more desperate.
Battle had been joined in the corridor, but Hatch'net and the
others couldn't possibly get through the sentries in time to
stop the two hook horrors undoubtedly charging his back.
Prudence dictated that Drizzt relinquish his position over
this one and spin away into a defensive posture.
The child's agonized scream, however, overruled prudence.
Rage burned in Drizzt's eyes so blatantly that even
the stupid hook horror knew its life was soon to end. Drizzt
put the tips of his scimitars together in a "V" and plunged
them down onto the back of the monster's skull with all his
might. Seeing a slight crack in the creature's shell, Drizzt
crossed the hilts of his weapons, reversed the points, and
split a clear opening in the monster's defense. He then
snapped the hilts together and plunged the blades straight
down, through the soft flesh and into the monster's brain.
A heavy claw sliced a deep line across Drizzt's shoulders,
tearing his piwafwi and drawing blood. He dove forward
into a roll and came up with his wounded back to the far
wall. Only one hook horror moved in at him; the other
picked up the child.
"No!" Drizzt screamed in protest. He started forward,
only to be slapped back by the attacking monster. Then, paralyzed,
he watched in horror as the other hook horror put
an end to the child's screams.
Rage replaced determination in Drizzt's eyes. The closest
hook horror rushed at him, meaning to crush him against
the stone. Drizzt recognized its intentions and didn't even
try to dodge out of the way. Instead, he reversed his grip on
his weapons and locked them against the wall, above his
shoulders.
With the momentum of the monster's eight-hundredpound
bulk carrying it on, even the armor of its shell could
not protect the hook horror from the adamantite scimitars.
It slammed Drizzt up against the wall, but in doing so impaled
itself through the belly.
The creature jumped back, trying to wriggle free, but it
could not escape the fury of Drizzt Do'Urden. Savagely the
young drow twisted the impaled blades. He then shoved off
from the wall with the strength of anger, tumbling the giant
monster backward.
Two of Drizzt's enemies were dead, and one of the hook
horror sentries in the hallway was down, but Drizzt found
no relief in those facts. The third hook horror towered over
him as he desperately tried to get his blades free from his
latest victim. Drizzt had no escape from this one.
The second patrol arrived then, and Dinin and Berg'inyon
Baenre rushed into the cul-de-sac, along the same ledge
Drizzt had taken. The hook horror turned away from
Drizzt just as the two skilled fighters came at it.
Drizzt ignored the painful gash in his back and the cracks
he had no doubt suffered in his slender ribs. Breathing
came to him in labored gasps, but this, too, was of no consequence.
He finally managed to free one of his blades, and he
charged at the monster's back. Caught in the middle of the
three skilled drow, the hook horror went down in seconds.
The corridor was finally cleared, and the dark elves
rushed in all around the cul-de-sac. They had lost only one
student in their battle against the monster sentries.
"A princess of House Barrison'del'armgo” remarked one
of the students in Dinin's patrol, looking at the child's body.
"House Baenre, we were told” said another student, one
from Hatch'net's group. Drizzt did not miss the discrepancy.
Berg'inyon Baenre rushed over to see if the victim was indeed
his youngest sister.
"Not of my house” he said with obvious relief after a quick
inspection. He then laughed as further examination revealed
a few other details about the corpse. "Not even a
princess!" he declared.
Drizzt watched it all curiously, noting the impassive, callous
attitude of his companions most of all.
Another student confirmed Berg'inyon's observation. "A
boy child!" he spouted. "But of what house?"
Master Hatch'net moved over to the tiny body and
reached down to take the purse from around the child's
neck. He emptied its contents into his hand, revealing the
emblem of a lesser house.
" A lost waif” he laughed to his students, tossing the empty
purse back to the ground and pocketing its contents, "of no
consequence”
"A fine fight” Dinin was quick to add, "with only one loss.
Go back to Menzoberranzan proud of the work you have accomplished
this day”
Drizzt slapped the blades of his scimitars together in a resounding
ring of protest.
Master Hatch'net ignored him. "Form up and head back”
he told the others. "You all performed well this day” He then
glared at Drizzt, stopping the angry student in his tracks.
"Except for you!" Hatch'net snarled. "I cannot ignore the
fact that you downed two of the beasts and helped with a
third” Hatch'net scolded, "but you endangered the rest of
us with your foolish bravado!"
"I warned of the sentries-" Drizzt stuttered.
"Damn your warningl" shouted the master. "You went off
without command! You ignored the accepted methods of
battle! You led us in here blindly! Look at the corpse of your
fallen companion!" Hatch'net raged, pointing to the dead
student in the corridor. "His blood is on your hands!
"I meant to save the child” Drizzt argued.
"We all meant to save the child!" retorted Hatch'net.
Drizzt was not so certain. What would a child be doing
out in these corridors all alone? How convenient that a
group of hook horrors, a rarely seen beast in the region of
Menzoberranzan, just happened by to provide training for
this "practice patrol” Tho convenient, Drizzt knew, considering
that the passages farther from the city teemed with
the true patrols of seasoned warriors, wizards, and even
clerics.
"You knew what was around the bend in the tunnel”
Drizzt said evenly, his eyes narrowing at the master.
The slap of a blade across the wound on his back made
Drizzt lurch in pain, and he nearly lost his footing. He
turned to find Dinin glaring down at him.
"Keep your foolish words unspoken” Dinin warned in a
harsh whisper, "or I will cut out your tongue”
"The child was a plant” Drizzt insisted when he was alone
with his brother in Dinin's room.
Dinin's response was a stinging smack across the face.
"They sacrificed him for the purpose of the drill” growled
the unrelenting younger Do'Urden.
Dinin launched a second punch, but Drizzt caught it in
midswing. "You know the truth of my words” Drizzt said.
"You knew about it all along”
"Learn your place, Secondboy” Dinin replied in open
threat, "in the Academy and in the family” He pulled away
from his brother.
"Th the Nine Hells with the Academy!" Drizzt spat at
Dinin's face. "If the family holds similar. . “ He noticed that
Dinin's hands now held sword and dirk.
Drizzt jumped back, his own scimitars coming out at the
ready. "I have no desire to fight you, my brother” he said.
"Know well that if you attack, I will defend. Only one of us
will walk out of here”
Dinin considered his next move carefully. If he attacked
and won, the threat to his position in the family would be at
an end. Certainly no one, not even Matron Malice, would
question the punishment he levied against his impertinent
younger brother. Dinin had seen Drizzt in battle, though.
Two hook horrors! Even Zaknafein would be hard pressed
to attain such a victory. Still, Dinin knew that if he did not
carry through with his threat, if he let Drizzt face him
down, he might give Drizzt confidence in their future struggles,
possibly inciting the treachery he had always expected
from the secondboy.
"What is this, then?" came a voice from the room's doorway.
The brothers turned to see their sister Vierna, a mistress
of Arach- Tinilith. "Put your weapons away” she
scolded. "House Do'Urden cannot afford such infighting
now!"
Realizing that he had been let off the hook, Dinin readily
complied with the demands, and Drizzt did likewise.
"Consider yourselves fortunate” said Vierna, "for I'll not
tell Matron Malice of this stupidity. She would not be merciful,
I promise you”
"Why have you come unannounced to Melee-Magthere?"
asked the elderboy, perturbed by his sister's attitude. He,
too, was a master of the Academy, even if he was only a
male, and deserved some respect.
Vierna glanced up and down the hallway, then closed the
door behind her. "To warn my brothers” she explained quietly.
"There are rumors of vengeance against our house”
"By what family?" Dinin pressed. Drizzt just stood back in
confused silence and let the two continue. "For what deed?"
"For the elimination of House DeVir, I would presume” replied
Vierna. "Little is known; the rumors are vague. I
wanted to warn you both, though, so that you might keep
your guard especially high in the coming months”
"House DeVir fell many years ago” said Dinin. "What penalty
could still be enacted?"
Vierna shrugged. "They are just rumors” she said. "Rumors
to be listened to!"
"We have been accused of a wrongful deed?" Drizzt
asked. "Surely our family must call out this false accuser”
Vierna and Dinin exchanged smiles. "Wrongful?" Vierna
laughed.
Drizzt's expression revealed his confusion.
"On the very night you were born” Dinin explained,
"House DeVir ceased to exist. An excellent attack, thank
you”
"House Do'Urden?" gasped Drizzt, unable to come to
terms with the startling news. Of course, Drizzt knew of
such battles, but he had held out hope that his own family
was above that sort of murderous action.
"One of the finest eliminations ever carried out” Vierna
boasted. "Not a witness left alive”
"You. . . our family. . . murdered another family?"
"Watch your words, Secondboy” Dinin warned. "The
deed was perfectly executed. In the eyes of Menzoberranzan,
therefore, it never happened”
"But House DeVir ceased to exist” said Drizzt.
"The child” said Dinin with a laugh.
A thousand possibilities assaulted Drizzt at that awful moment,
a thousand pressing questions that he needed answered.
One in particular stood out vividly, welling like a
lump of bile in his throat.
"Where was Zaknafein that night?" he asked.
"In the chapel of House DeVir's clerics, of course” replied
Vierna. "
Knafein plays his part in such business so very well”
Drizzt rocked back on his heels, hardly able to believe
what he was hearing. He knew that Zak had killed drow before,
had killed clerics of Lloth before, but Drizzt had always
assumed that the weapon master had acted out of
necessity, in self-defense.
"You should show more respect to your brother” Vierna
scolded him. "To draw weapons against Dinin! You owe him
your life!"
"You know?" Dinin chuckled, casting Vierna a curious
glance.
"You and I were melded that night” Vierna reminded him.
"Of course I know”
"What are you talking about?" asked Drizzt, almost afraid
to hear the reply.
"You were to be the third-born male in the family” Vierna
explained, "the third living son”
"I have heard of my brother Nal-" The name stuck in
Drizzt's throat as he began to understand. All he had ever
been able to learn of Nalfein was that he had been killed by
another drow.
"You will learn in your studies at Arach-Tinilith that third
living sons are customarily sacrificed to Lloth” Vierna con.
tinued. "So were you promised. On the night that you were
born, the night that House Do'Urden battled House DeVir,
Dinin made his ascent to the position of elderboy” She cast a
sly glance at her brother, standing with his arms proudly
crossed over his chest.
"I can speak of it now” Vierna smiled at Dinin, who nodded
his head in accord. "It happened too long ago for any
punishment to be brought against Dinin”
"What are you talking about?" Drizzt demanded. Panic
hovered all about him. "What did Dinin do?"
"He put his sword into Nalfein's back” Vierna said calmly.
Drizzt swam on the edge of nausea. Sacrifice? Murder?
The annihilation of a family, even the children? What were
his siblings talking about?
"Show respect to your brother!" Vierna demanded. "You
owe him your life.
"I warn the both of you” she purred, her ominous glare
shaking Drizzt and knocking Dinin from his confident pedestal.
"House Do'Urden may be on a course of war. If either
of you strike out against the other, you will bring the wrath
of all your sisters and Matron Malice-four high
priestesses-down upon your worthless soul!" Confident
that her threat carried sufficient weight, she turned and
left the room.
"I will go” Drizzt whispered, wanting only to skulk away
to a dark corner.
"You will go when you are dismissed!" Dinin scolded. "Remember
your place, Drizzt Do'Urden, in the Academy and
in the family”
" As you remembered yours with Nalfein?"
"The battle against DeVir was won” Dinin replied, taking
no offense. "The act brought no peril to the family”
Another wave of disgust swept over Drizzt. He felt as if
the floor were climbing up to swallow him, and he almost
hoped that it would.
"It is a difficult world we inhabit” Dinin said.
"We make it so” Drizzt retorted. He wanted to continue
further, to implicate the Spider Queen and the whole
amoral religion that would sanction such destructive and
treacherous actions. Drizzt wisely held his tongue, though.
Dinin wanted him dead; he understood that now. Drizzt understood
as well that if he gave his scheming brother the opportunity
to turn the females of the family against him,
Dinin surely would.
"You must learn” Dinin said, again in a controlled tone, "to
accept the realities of your surroundings. You must learn to
recognize your enemies and defeat them”
"By whatever means are available” Drizzt concluded.
"The mark of a true warrior!" Dinin replied with a wicked
laugh.
"Are our enemies drow elves?"
"We are drow warriors!" Dinin declared sternly. "We do
what we must to survive."
" As you did, on the night of my birth” Drizzt reasoned,
though at this point, there was no remaining trace of outrage
in his resigned tone. "You were cunning enough to get
away cleanly with the deed”
Dinin's reply, though expected, stung the younger drow
profoundly.
"It never happened”
Chapter 15
On The DarkSide
"I am Drizzt-"
"I know who you are” replied the student mage, Drizzt's
appointed tutor in Sorcere. "Your reputation precedes you.
Most in all the Academy have heard of you and of your
prowess with weapons”
Drizzt bowed low, a bit embarrassed.
"That skill will be of little use to you here” the mage went
on. "I am to tutor you in the wizardly arts, the dark side of
magic, we call them. This is a test of your mind and your
heart; meager metal weapons will play no part. Magic is the
true power of our people!"
Drizzt accepted the berating without reply. He knew that
the traits this young mage was boasting of were also necessary
qualities of a true fighter. Physical attributes played
only a minor role in Drizzt's style of battle. Strong will and
calculated maneuvers, everything the mage apparently believed
only wizards could handle, won the duels that Drizzt
fought.
"I will show you many marvels in the next few months”
the mage went on, "artifacts beyond your belief and spells
of a power beyond your experience!"
"May I know your name?" Drizzt asked, trying to sound
somewhat impressed by the student's continued stream of
self-glorification. Drizzt had already learned quite a lot
about wizardry from Zaknafein, mostly of the weaknesses
inherent in the class. Because of magic's usefulness in situations
other than battle; drow wizards were accorded a high
position in the society, second to the clerics of Lloth. It was a
wizard, after all, who lighted the glowing Narbondel, time
clock of the city, and wizards who lighted faerie fires on the
sculptures of the decorated houses.
Zaknafein had little respect for wizards. They could kill
quickly and from a distance, he had warned Drizzt, but if
one could get in close to them, they had little defense
against a sword.
"Masoj” replied the mage. "Masoj Hun'ett of House
Hun'ett, beginning my thirtieth and final year of study. Soon
I will be recognized as a full wizard of Menzoberranzan,
with all of the privileges accorded my station”
"Greetings, then, Masoj Hun'ett” Drizzt replied. "I, too,
have but a year remaining in my training at the Academy,
for a fighter spends only ten years”
"A lesser talent” Masoj was quick to remark. "Wizards
study thirty years before they are even considered practiced
enough to go out and perform their craft”
Again Drizzt accepted the insult graciously. He wanted to
get this phase of his instruction over with, then finish out
the year and be rid of the Academy altogether.
Drizzt found his six months under Masoj's tutelage actually
the best of his stay at the Academy. Not that he came to
care for Masoj; the budding wizard constantly sought ways
to remind Drizzt of fighters' inferiority. Drizzt sensed a
competition between himself and Masoj, almost as if the
mage were setting him up for some future conflict. The
young fighter shrugged his way through it, as he always
had, and tried to get as much out of the lessons as he could.
Drizzt found that he was quite proficient in the ways of
magic. Every drow, the fighters included, possessed a degree
of magical talent and certain innate abilities. Even
drow children could conjure a globe of darkness or edge
their opponents in a glowing outline of harmless colored
flames. Drizzt handled these tasks easily, and in a few
weeks, he could manage several cantrips and a few lesser
spells.
With the innate magical talents of the dark elves also came
a resistance to magical attacks, and that is where Zaknafein
had recognized the wizards' greatest weakness. A wizard
could cast his most powerful spell to perfection, but if his intended
victim was a drow elf, the wizard may well have
found no results for his efforts. The surety of a well-aimed
sword thrust always impressed Zaknafein, and Drizzt, after
witnessing the drawbacks of drow magic during those first
weeks with Masoj, began to appreciate the course of training
he had been given.
He still found great enjoyment in many of the things Masoj
showed him, particularly the enchanted items housed in the
tower of Sorcere. Drizzt held wands and staves of incredible
power and went through several attack routines with a
sword so heavily enchanted that his hands tingled from its
touch.
Masoj, too, watched Drizzt carefully through it all, studying
the young warrior's every move, searching for some
weakness that he might exploit if House Hun'ett and House
Do'Urden ever did fall into the expected conflict. Several
times, Masoj saw an opportunity to eliminate Drizzt, and he
felt in his heart that it would be a prudent move. Matron
SiNafay's instructions to him, though, had been explicit and
unbending.
Masoj's mother had secretly arranged for him to be
Drizzt's tutor. This was not an unusual situation; instruction
for fighters during their six months in Sorcere was always
handled one-on-one by higher-level Sorcere students. When
she had told Masoj of the setup, SiNafay quickly reminded
him that his sessions with the young Do'Urden remained no
more than a scouting mission. He was not to do anything
that might even hint of the planned conflict between the
two houses. Masoj was not fool enough to disobey.
Still, there was one other wizard lurking in the shadows,
who was so desperate that even the warnings of the matron
mother did little to deter him.
"My student, Masoj, has informed me of your fine progress”
Alton DeVir said to Drizzt one day.
"Thank you, Master Faceless One” Drizzt replied hesitantly,
more than a little intimidated that a master of Sorcere
had invited him to a private audience.
"How do you perceive magic, young warrior?" Alton
asked. "Has Masoj impressed you?"
Drizzt didn't know how to respond. Truly, magic had not
impressed him as a profession, but he did not want to insult
a master of the craft. "I find the art beyond my abilities” he
said tactfully. "For others, it seems a powerful course, but i
believe my talents are more closely linked to the sword”
"Could your weapons defeat one of magical power?" Alton
snarled. He quickly bit back the sneer, trying not to tip
off his intent.
Drizzt shrugged. "Each has its place in battle” he replied.
"Who could say which is the mightier? As with every combat,
it would depend upon the individuals engaged”
"Well, what of yourself?" Alton teased. "First in your class,
I have heard, year after year. 'The masters of Melee-
Magthere speak highly of your talents”
Again Drizzt found himself flushed with embarrassment.
More than that, though, he was curious as to why a master
and student of Sorcere seemed to know so much about him.
"Could you stand against one of magical powers?" asked
Alton. "Against a master of Sorcere, perhaps?"
"I do not-" Drizzt began, but Alton was too enmeshed in
his own ranting to hear him.
"Let us learn!" the Faceless One cried. He drew out a thin
wand and promptly loosed a bolt of lightning at Drizzt.
Drizzt was down into a dive before the wand even discharged.
The lightning bolt sundered the door to Alton's
highest chamber and bounced about the adjoining room,
breaking items and scorching the walls.
Drizzt came rolling back to his feet at the side of the room,
his scimitars drawn and ready. He still was unsure of this
master's intent.
"How many can you dodge?" Alton teased, waving the
wand in a threatening circle. "What of the other spells I
have at my disposal-those that attack the mind, not the
body?"
Drizzt tried to understand the purpose of this lesson and
the part he was meant to play in it. Was he supposed to attack
this master?
"These are not practice blades” he warned, holding his
weapons out toward Alton.
Another bolt roared in, forcing Drizzt to dodge back to his
original position. "Does this seem like practice to you, foolish
Do'Urden?" Alton growled. "Do you know who I am?"
Alton's time of revenge had come-damn the orders of
Matron SiNafay!
Just as Alton was about to reveal the truth to Drizzt, a
dark form slammed into the master's back, knocking him to
the floor. He tried to squirm away but found himself helplessly
pinned by a huge black panther.
Drizzt lowered the tips of his blades; he was at a loss to
understand any of this.
"Enough, Guenhwyvar!" came a call from behind Alton.
Looking past the fallen master and the cat, Drizzt saw Masoj
enter the room.
The panther sprang away from Alton obediently and
moved to rejoin its master. It paused on its way, to consider
Drizzt, who stood ready in the middle of the room.
So enchanted was Drizzt with the beast, the graceful flow
of its rippling muscles and the intelligence in its saucer eyes,
that he paid little attention to the master who had just attacked
him, though Alton, unhurt, was back to his feet and
obviously upset.
"My pet” Masoj explained. Drizzt watched in amazement
as Masoj dismissed the cat back to its own plane of existence
by sending its corporeal form back into the magical onyx
statuette he held in his hand.
"Where did you get such a companion?" Drizzt asked.
"Never underestimate the powers of magic” Masoj replied,
dropping the figurine into a deep pocket. His beaming
smile became a scowl as he looked to Alton.
Drizzt, too, glanced at the faceless master. That a student
had dared to attack a master seemed impossibly odd
to the young fighter. This situation grew more puzzling
each minute.
Alton knew that he had overstepped his bounds, and that
he would have to pay a high price for his foolishness if he
could not find some way out of this predicament.
"Have you learned your lesson this day?" Masoj asked
Drizzt, though Alton realized that the question was also directed
his way.
Drizzt shook his head. "I am not certain of the point of all
this” he answered honestly.
"A display of the weakness of magic” Masoj explained, trying
to disguise the truth of the encounter, "to show you the
disadvantage caused by the necessary intensity of a casting
wizard; to show you the vulnerability of a mage obsessed-"
he eyed Alton directly at this point-"with spellcasting. The
complete vulnerability when a wizard's intended prey becomes
his overriding concern”
Drizzt recognized the lie for what it was, but he could
not understand the motives behind this day's events. Why
would a master of Sorcere attack him so? Why would Masoj,
still just a student, risk so much to come to his defense?
"Let us bother the master no more” Masoj said, hoping to
deflect Drizzt's curiosity further. "Come with me now to our
practice hall. 1 will show you more of Guenhwyvar, my magical
pet”
Drizzt looked to Alton, wondering what the unpredictable
master would do next.
"Do go” Alton said calmly, knowing the facade Masoj had
begun would be his only way around the wrath of his
adopted matron mother. "I am confident that this day's lesson
was learned” he said, his eyes on Masoj.
Drizzt glanced back to Masoj, then back to Alton again.
He let it go at that. He wanted to learn more of Guenhwyvar.
When Masoj had Drizzt back in the privacy of the tutor's
own room, he took out the polished onyx figurine in the
form of a panther and called Guenhwyvar back to his side.
The mage breathed easier after he had introduced Drizzt
to the cat, for Drizzt spoke no more about the incident
with Alton.
Never before had Drizzt encountered such a wonderful
magical item. He sensed a strength in Guenhwyvar, a dignity,
that belied the beast's enchanted nature. Truly, the
cat's sleek muscles and graceful moves epitomized the hunting
qualities drow elves so dearly desired. Just by watching Guenhwyvar's
movements, Drizzt believed, he could improve
his own techniques.
Masoj let them play together and spar together for hours,
grateful that Guenhwyvar could help him smooth over any
damage that foolish Alton had done.
Drizzt had already put his meeting with the faceless monter
far behind him.
"Matron SiNafay would not understand” Masoj warned
Alton when they were alone later that day.
"You will tell her” Alton reasoned matter-of-factly. So frustrated
was he with his failure to kill Drizzt that he hardly
cared.
Masoj shook his head. "She need not know”
A suspicious smile found its way across Alton's disfigured
face. "What do you want?" he asked coyly. "Your tenure
here is almost at its end. What more might a master do for
Masoj?"
"Nothing” Masoj replied. "I want nothing from you”
"Then why?" Alton demanded. "I desire no debts follow.
ing my paths. This incident is to be done with here and
now!"
"It is done” Masoj replied. Alton didn't seem convinced.
"What could I gain from telling Matron SiNafay of your
foolish actions?" Masoj reasoned. "Likely, she would kill you,
and then the coming war with House Do'Urden would have
no basis. You are the link we need to justify the attack. I desire
this battle; I'll not risk it for the little pleasure I might
find in your tortured demise”
"I was foolish” Alton admitted, more somberly. "I had not
planned to kill Drizzt when I summoned him here, just to
watch him and learn of him, so that I might savor more
when the time to kill him finally arrived. Seeing him before
me, though, seeing a cursed Do'Urden standing unprotected
before me . . . !"
"I understand” said Masoj sincerely. "I have had those
same feelings when looking upon that one”
"You have no grudge against House Do'Urden”
"Not the house” Masoj explained, "that one! I have
watched him for nearly a decade, studied his movements
and his attitudes”
"You like not what you see?" Alton asked, a hopeful tone in
his voice.
"He does not belong” Masoj replied grimly. "After six
months by his side, I feel I know him less now than I ever
did. He displays no ambition, yet has emerged victorious
from his class's grand melee nine years in a row. It's unprecedented!
His grasp of magic is strong; he could have been a
wizard, a very powerful wizard, if he had chosen that
course of study”
Masoj clenched his fist, searching for the words to convey
his true emotions about Drizzt. "It is all too easy for him” he
snarled. "There is no sacrifice in Drizzt's actions, no scars
for the great gains he makes in his chosen profession”
"He is gifted” Alton remarked, "but he trains as hard as
any I have ever seen, by all accounts”
"That is not the problem” Masoj groaned in frustration.
There was something less tangible about Drizzt Do'Urden's
character that truly irked the young Hun'ett. He couldn't
recognize it now, because he had never witnessed it in any
dark elf before, and because it was so very foreign to his
own makeup. What bothered Masoj-and many other students
and masters-was the fact that Drizzt excelled in all
the fighting skills the drow elves most treasured but hadn't
given up his passion in return. Drizzt had not paid the price
that the rest of the drow children were made to sacrifice
long before they had even entered the Academy.
"It is not important” Masoj said after several fruitless minutes
of contemplation. "I will learn more of the young
Do'Urden in time”
"His tutelage under you was finished, I had thought” said
Alton. "He goes to Arach- Tinilith for the final six months of
his training-quite inaccessible to you”
"We both graduate after those six months” Masoj explained.
"We will share our indenture time in the patrol
forces together”
"Many will share that time” Alton reminded him. "Dozens
of groups patrol the corridors of the region. You may never
even see Drizzt in all the years of your term”
"I already have arranged for us to serve in the same
group” replied Masoj. He reached into his pocket and produced
the onyx figurine of the magical panther.
"A mutual agreement between yourself and the young
Do'Urden” Alton reasoned with a complimentary smile.
"It appears that Drizzt has become quite fond of my pet”
Masoj chuckled.
"Too fond?" Alton warned. "You should watch your back
for scimitars”
Masoj laughed aloud. "Perhaps our friend, Do'Urden,
should watch his back for panther claws!"
Chapter 16
Sacrilege
"Last day” Drizzt breathed in relief as he donned his ceremonial
robes. If the first six months of this final year, learning
the subtleties of magic in Sorcere, had been the most
enjoyable, these last six in the school of Lloth had been the
least. Every day, Drizzt and his classmates had been subjected
to endless eulogies to the Spider Queen, tales and
prophecies of her power and of the rewards she bestowed
upon loyal servants.
"Slaves" would have been a better word, Drizzt had come
to realize, for nowhere in all this grand school to the drow
deity had he heard anything synonymous with, or even
hinting at, the word love. His people worshiped Lloth, the
females of Menzoberranzan gave over their entire existence
in her servitude. Their giving was wholly wrought of
selfishness, though; a cleric of the Spider Queen aspired to
the position of high priestess solely for the personal power
that accompanied the title.
It all seemed so very wrong in Drizzt's heart.
Drizzt had drifted through the six months of Arach-
Tinilith with his customary stoicism, keeping his eyes low
and his mouth shut. Now, finally, he had come to the last
day, the Ceremony of Graduation, an event most holy to the
drow, and wherein, Vierna had promised him, he would
come to understand the true glory of Lloth.
With tentative steps, Drizzt moved out from the shelter of
his tiny, unadorned room. He worried that this ceremony
had become his personal trial. Up to now, very little about
the society around Drizzt had made any sense to him, and
he wondered, despite his sister's assurances, whether the
events of this day would allow him to see the world as his
kin saw it. Drizzt's fears had taken a spiral twist, one rolling
out from the other to surround him in a predicament he
could not escape.
Perhaps, he worried, he truly feared that the day's events
would fulfill Vierna's promise.
Drizzt shielded his eyes as he entered the circular ceremonial
hall of Arach- Tinilith. A fire burned in the center of
the room, in an eight-legged brazier that resembled, as
everything in this place seemed to resemble, a spider. The
headmistress of all the Academy, the matron mistress, and
the other twelve high priestesses serving as instructors of
Arach- Tinilith, including Drizzt's sister, sat cross-legged in a
circle around the brazier. Drizzt and his classmates from
the school of fighters stood along the wall behind them.
"Ma ku!" the matron mistress commanded, and all was silent
save the crackle of the brazier's flames. The door to the
room opened again, and a young cleric entered. She was to
be the first graduate of Arach- Tinilith this year, Drizzt had
been told, the finest student in the school of Lloth. Thus, she
had been awarded the highest honors in this ceremony. She
shrugged off her robes and walked naked through the ring
of sitting priestesses to stand before the flames, her back to
the matron mistress.
Drizzt bit his lip, embarrassed and a little excited. He had
never seen a female in such a light before, and he suspected
that the sweat on his brow was from more than the brazier's
heat. A quick glance around the room told him that his
classmates entertained similar ideas.
"Rae-go si'n'ee calamay” the matron mistress whispered,
and red smoke poured from the brazier, colpring the room
in a hazy glow. It carried an aroma with it, rich and sickly
sweet. As Drizzt breathed the scented air, he felt himself
grow lighter and wondered if he soon would be floating off
the floor!
The flames in the brazier suddenly roared higher, causing
Drizzt to squint against the brightness and turn away. The
clerics began a ritual chant, though the words were unfamiliar
to Drizzt. He hardly paid them any heed, though, for
he was too intent on holding his own thoughts in the overpowering
swoon of the inebriating haze.
"Glabrezu” the matron mistress moaned, and Drizzt recognized
the tone as a summons, the name of a denizen of
the lower planes. He looked back to the events at hand and
saw the matron mistress holding a single-tongued snake
whip.
"Where did she get that?" Drizzt mumbled, then he real.
ized that he had spoken aloud and hoped he hadn't disturbed
the ceremony. He was comforted when he glanced
around, for many of his classmates were mumbling to themselves,
and some seemed hardly able to hold their balance.
"Call to it” the matron mistress instructed the naked student.
Tentatively, the young cleric spread her arms out wide
and whispered, "Glabrezu”
The flames danced about the rim of the brazier. The
smoke wafted into Drizzt's face, compelling him to inhale it.
His legs tingled on the edge of numbness, yet they somehow
felt more sensitive, more alive, than they ever had before.
"Glabrezu” he heard the student say again louder, and
Drizzt heard, too, the roar of the flames. Brightness assaulted
him, but somehow he didn't seem to care. His gaze
roamed about the room, unable to find a focus, unable to
place the strange, dancing sights in accord with the ritual's
sounds.
He heard the high priestesses gasping and coaxing the student
on, knowing the conjuring to be at hand. He heard the
snap of the snake whip-another incentive?-and cries of
"Glabrezu!" from the student. So primal, so powerful, were
these screams that they cut through Drizzt and the other
males in the room with an intensity they never would have
believed possible.
The flames heard the call. They roared higher and higher
and began to take shape. One sight caught the vision of all in
the room now-caught it and held it fully. A giant head, a
goat-horned dog, appeared within the flames, apparently
studying this alluring young drow student who had dared
to utter its name.
Somewhere beyond the otherplanar form, the snake
whip cracked again, and the female student repeated her
call, her cry beckoning, praying.
The giant denizen of the lower planes stepped through
the flames. The sheer unholy power of the creature
stunned Drizzt. Glabrezu towered nine feet and seemed
much more, with muscled arms ending in giant pincers instead
of hands and a second set of smaller arms, normal
arms, protruding from the front of its chest.
Drizzt's instincts told him to attack the monster and rescue
the female student, but when he looked around for support,
he found the matron mistress and the other teachers
of the school back in their ritualistic chanting, this time with
an excited edge permeating their every word.
Through all the haze and the daze, the talJtalizing, dizzying
aroma of the smoky red incense continued its assault on
reality. Drizzt trembled, teetered on a narrow ledge of control,
his gathering rage fighting the scented smoke's confusing
allure. Instinctively, his hands went to the hilts of the
scimitars on his belt.
Then a hand brushed against his leg.
He looked down to see a mistress, reclined and asking him
to join her-a scene that had suddenly become general
around the chamber.
The smoke continued its assault on him. ;
The mistress beckoned to him, her fingernails lightly
scraping the skin of his leg.
Drizzt ran his fingers through his thick hair, trying to find
some focal point in the dizziness. He did not like this loss of
control, this mental numbness that stole the fine edge of his
reflexes and alertness.
He liked even less the scene unfolding before him. The
sheer wrongness of it assaulted his soul. He pulled away
from the mistress's hopeful grasp and stumbled across the
room, tripping over numerous entwined forms too engaged
to take note of him. He made the exit as quickly as his wobbly
legs could carry him, and he rushed out of the room,
pointedly closing the door behind him.
Only the screams of the female student followed him. No
stone or mental barricade could block them out.
Drizzt leaned heavily against the cool stone wall, grasping
at his stomach. He hadn't even paused to consider the implications
of his actions; he knew only that he had to get out of
that foul room.
Vierna then was beside him, her robe opened casually in
the front. Drizzt, his head clearing, began to wonder about
the price of his actions. The look on his sister's face, he
noted with still more confusion, was not one of scorn.
"You prefer privacy” she said, her hand resting easily on
Drizzt's shoulder. Vierna made no move to close her robe. "I
understand” she said.
Drizzt grabbed her arm and pulled her away. "What insanity
is this?" he demanded.
Vierna's face twisted as she came to understand her
brother's true intentions in leaving the ceremony. "You
refused a high priestess!" she snarled at him. "By the laws,
she could kill you for your insolence”
"I do not even know her” Drizzt shot back. "I am expected
to-"
"You are expected to do as you are instructed!"
"I care nothing for her” Drizzt stammered. He found he
could not hold his hands steady.
"Do you think Zaknafein cared for Matron Malice?"
Vierna replied, knowing that the reference to Drizzt's hero
would surely sting him. Seeing that she had indeed
wounded her brother, Vierna softened her expression and
took his arm. "Come back” she purred, "into the room.
There is still time”
Drizzt's cold glare stopped her as surely as the point of a
scimitar.
"The Spider Queen is the deity of our people” Vierna
sternly reminded him. "I am one of those who speaks her
will”
"I would not be so proud of that” Drizzt retorted, clinging
to his anger against the wave of very real fear that threatened
to defeat his principled stand.
Vierna slapped him hard across the face. "Go back to the
ceremony!" she demanded.
"Go kiss a spider” Drizzt replied. "And may its pincers tear
your cursed tongue from your mouth”
It was Vierna now who could not hold her hands steady.
"You should take care when you speak to a high priestess”
she warned.
"Damn your Spider Queen!" Drizzt spat. "Though I am
certain Lloth found damnation eons ago!"
"She brings us power!" Vierna shrieked.
"She steals everything that makes us worth more than the
stone we walk upon!" Drizzt screamed back.
"Sacrilege'" Vierna sneered, the word rolling off her
tongue like the whistle of the matron mistress's snake whip.
A climactic, anguished scream erupted from inside the
room.
"Evil union” Drizzt muttered, looking away.
"There is a gain” Vierna replied, quickly back in control of
her temper.
Drizzt cast an accusing glance her way. "Have you had a
similar experience?"
"I am a high priestess” was her simple reply.
Darkness hovered all about Drizzt, outrage so intense
that he nearly swooned. "Did it please you?" he spat.
"It brought me power” Vierna growled back. "You cannot
understand the value”
"What did it cost you?"
Vierna's slap nearly knocked Drizzt from his feet. "Come
with me” she said, grabbing the front of his robe. "There is a
place I want to show to you”
They moved out from Arach-Tinilith and across the Academy's
courtyard. Drizzt hesitated when they reached the
pillars that marked the entrance to Tier Breche.
"I cannot pass between these” he reminded his sister. "I
am not yet graduated from Melee-Magthere”
"A formality” Vierna replied, not slowing her pace at all. "I
am a mistress of Arach- Tinilith; I have the power to graduate
you”
Drizzt wasn't certain of the truth of Vierna's claim, but
she was indeed a mistress of Arach- Tinilith. As much as
Drizzt feared the edicts of the Academy, he didn't want to
anger Vierna again.
He followed her down the wide stone stairs and out into
the meandering roadways of the city proper.
"Home?" he dared to ask after a short while.
"Not yet” came the curt reply. Drizzt didn't press the point
any further.
They veered off to the eastern end of the great cavern,
across from the wall that held House Do'Orden, and came to
the entrances of three small tunnels, all guarded by glowing
statues of giant scorpions. Vierna paused for just a moment
to consider which was the correct course, then led on again,
down the smallest of the tunnels.
The minutes became an hour, and still they walked. The
passage widened and soon led them into a twisting catacomb
of crisscrossing corridors. Drizzt quickly lost track of
the path behind them as they made their way through, but
Vierna followed a predetermined course that she knew
well.
Then, beyond a low archway, the floor suddenly dropped
away and they found themselves on a narrow ledge overlooking
a wide chasm. Drizzt looked at his sister curiously
but held his question when he saw that she was deep in the
concentration. She uttered a few simple commands, then
tapped herself and Drizzt on the forehead.
"Come” she instructed, and she and Drizzt stepped off the
ledge and levitated down to the chasm floor.
A thin mist, from some unseen hot pool or tar pit, hugged
the stone. Drizzt could sense the danger here, and the evil.
A brooding wickedness hung in the air as tangibly as the
mist.
"Do not fear” Vierna signaled to him. "I have put a spell of
masking upon us. They cannot see us”
"They?" Drizzt's hands asked, but even as he motioned in
the code, he heard a scuttling off to the side. He followed
Vierna's gaze down to a distant boulder and the wretched
thing perched upon it.
At first, Drizzt thought it was a drow elf, and from the
waist up, it was indeed, though bloated and pale. Its lower
body, though, resembled a spider, with eight arachnid legs
to support its frame. The creature held a bow ready in its
hands but seemed confused, as though it could not discern
what had entered its lair.
Vierna was pleased by the disgust on her brother's face as
he viewed the thing. "Look upon it well, younger brother”
she signaled. "Behold the fate of those who anger the Spider
Queen”
"What is it?" Drizzt signaled back quickly.
" A drider” Vierna whispered in his ear. Then, back in the
silent code, she added, "Lloth is not a merciful deity”
Drizzt watched, mesmerized, as the drider shifted its position
on the boulder, searching for the intruders. Drizzt
couldn't tell if it was a male or female, so bloated was its
torso, but he knew that it didn't matter. The creature was
not a natural creation and would leave no descendants behind,
whatever its gender. It was a tormented body, nothing
more, hating itself, in all probability, more than everything
else around it.
"I am merciful” Vierna continued silently, though she
knew her brother's attention was fully on the drider. She
rested back flat against the stone wall.
Drizzt spun on her, suddenly realizing her intent.
Then Vierna sank into the stone. "Goodbye, little brother”
came her final call. "This is a better fate than you deserve”
"No!" Drizzt growled, and he clawed at the empty wall until
an arrow sliced into his leg. The scimitars flashed out in
his hands as he spun back to face the danger. The drider
took aim for a second shot.
Drizzt meant to dive to the side, to the protection of another
boulder, but his wounded leg immediately fell numb
and useless. Poison.
Drizzt just got one blade up in time to deflect the second
arrow, and he dropped to one knee to clutch at his wound.
He could feel the cold poison making its way through his
limb, but he stubbornly snapped off the arrow shaft and
turned his attention back to the attacker. He would have to
worry about the wound later, would have to hope that he
could tend to it in time. Right now, his only concern was to
get out of the chasm.
He turned to flee, to seek a sheltered spot where he could
levitate back up to the ledge, but he found himself face-toface
with another drider.
An axe sliced by his shoulder, barely missing its mark.
Drizzt blocked the return blow and launched his second
scimitar into a thrust, which the drider stopped with a second
axe.
Drizzt was composed now, and was confident that he
could defeat this foe, even with one leg limiting his
mobility-until an arrow cracked into his back.
Drizzt lurched forward under the weight of the blow, but
managed to parry another attack from the drider before
him. Drizzt dropped to his knees and fell face-down.
When the axe-wielding drider, thinking Drizzt dead,
started toward him, Drizzt kicked into a roll that put him
squarely under the creature's bulbous belly. He plunged his
scimitar up with all his strength, then curled back under the
deluge of spidery fluids.
The wounded drider tried to scurry away but fell to the
side, its insides draining out onto the stone floor. Still, Drizzt
had no hope. His arms, too, were numb now, and when the
other wretched creature descended upon him, he could not
hope to fight it off. He struggled to cling to consciousness,
searching for some way out, battling to the bitter end. His
eyelids became heavy. . . .
Then Drizzt felt a hand grab his robe, and he was roughly
lifted to his feet and slammed against the stone wall.
He opened his eyes to see his sister's face.
"He lives” Drizzt heard her say. "We must get him back
quickly and tend to his wounds”
Another figure moved in front of him.
"I thought this the best way” Vierna apologized.
"We cannot afford to lose him” came an unemotional reply.
Drizzt recognized the voice from his past. He fought
through the blur and forced his eyes to focus.
"Malice” he whispered. "Mother”
Her enraged punch brought him into a clearer mind-set.
"Matron Malice!" she growled, her angry scowl only an
inch from Drizzt's face. "Do not ever forget that!"
To Drizzt, her coldness rivaled the poison's, and his relief
at seeing her faded away as quickly as it had flooded
through him.
"You must learn your place!" Malice roared, reiterating
the command that had haunted Drizzt all of his young life.
"Hear my words” she demanded, and Drizzt heard them
keenly. "Vierna brought you to this place to have you killed.
She showed you mercy” Malice cast a disappointed glance at
her daughter.
"I understand the will of the Spider Queen better than
she” the matron continued, her spittle spraying Drizzt with
every word. "If ever you speak ill of Lloth, our goddess,
again, I will take you back to this place myself! But not to kill
you; that would be too easy” She jerked Drizzt's head to the
side so that he could look upon the grotesque remains of the
drider he had killed.
"You will come back here” Malice assured him, "to become
a drider!"
Part 4
Guenhwyvar
What eyes are these that see
The pain I know in my innermost soul?
What eyes are these that see
The twisted strides of my kindred,
Led on in the wake of toys unbridled:
Arrow, bolt, and sword tip?
Yours. . . aye, yours,
Straight run and muscled spring,
Soft on padded paws, sheathed claws,
Weapons rested for their need,
Stained not by frivolous blood
Or murderous deceit.
Face to face, my mirror,
Reflection in a still pool by light.
Would that I might keep that image
Upon this face mine own.
Would that I might keep that heart
Within my breast untainted.
Hold tight to the proud honor of yo
Mighty Guenhwyvar,
And hold tight to my side,
My dearest friend.
-Drizzt Do'Urden
Chapter 17
Homecoming
Drizzt was graduated-formally-on schedule and with
the highest honors in his class. Perhaps Matron Malice had
whispered into the right ears, smoothing over her son's indiscretions,
but Drizzt suspected that more likely none of
those present at the Ceremony of Graduation even remembered
that he had left.
He moved through the decorated gate of House Do'Urden,
drawing stares from the common soldiery, and over to the
cavern floor below the balcony. "So I am home” he remarked
under his breath, "for whatever that means” After
what had happened in the drider lair, Drizzt wondered if he
would ever view House Do'Urden as his home again. Matron
Malice was expecting him. He didn't dare arrivp,.late.
"It is good that you are home” Briza said to him when she
saw him rise up over the balcony's railing.
Drizzt stepped tentatively through the entryway beside
his oldest sister, trying to get a firm grasp on his surround.
ings. Home, Briza called it, but to Drizzt, House Do'Urden
seemed as unfamiliar as the Academy had on his first day as
a student. Thn years was not such a long time in the centuries
of life a drow elf might know, but to Drizzt, more than
the decade of absence now separated him from this place.
Maya joined them in the great corridor leading to the
chapel anteroom. "Greetings, Prince Drizzt” she said, and
Drizzt couldn't tell if she was being sarcastic or not. "We
have heard of the honors you achieved at Melee-Magthere.
Your skill did House Do'Urden proud” In spite of her words,
Maya could not hide a derisive chuckle as she finished the
thought. "Glad, I am, that you did not become drider food”
Drizzt's glare stole the smile from her face.
Maya and Briza exchanged concerned glances. They
knew of the punishment Vierna had put upon their younger
brother, and of the vicious scolding he had received at the
hands of Matron Malice. They each cautiously rested a hand
on their snake whips, not knowing how foolish their dangerous
young brother might have become.
It was not Matron Malice or Drizzt's sisters that now had
Drizzt measuring every step before he took it. He knew
where he stood with his mother and knew what he had to
do to keep her appeased. There was another member of the
family, though, that evoked both confusion and anger in
Drizzt. Of all his kin, only Zaknafein pretended to be what
he was not. As Drizzt made his way to the chapel, he
glanced anxiously down every side passage, wondering
when Zak would make his appearance.
"How long before you leave for patrol?" Maya asked, pulling
Drizzt from his contemplations.
"Two days” Drizzt replied absently, his eyes still darting
from shadow to shadow. Then he was at the anteroom door,
with no sign of Zak. Perhaps the weapon master was
within, standing beside Malice.
"We know of your indiscretions; Briza snapped, suddenly
cold, as she placed her hand on the latch to the anteroom's
door. Drizzt was not surprised by her outburst. He was beginning
to expect such explosions from the high priestesses
of the Spider Queen.
"Why could you not just enjoy the pleasures of the ceremony?"
Maya added. "We are fortunate that the mistresses
and the matron of the Academy were too involved in their
own excitement to note your movements. You would have
brought shame upon our entire house!"
"You might have placed Matron Malice in Lloth's disfavor;
Briza was quick to add.
The best thing I could ever do for her, Drizzt thought. He
quickly dismissed the notion, remembering Briza's uncanny
proficiency at reading minds.
"Let us hope he did not” Maya said grimly to her sister.
"The tides of war hang thick in the air?'
"I have learned my place” Drizzt assured them. He bowed
low. "Forgive me, my sisters, and know that the truth of the
drow world is fast opening before my young eyes. Never
will I disappoint House Do'Urden in such a way again?'
So pleased were his sisters at the proclamation that the
ambiguity of Drizzt's words slipped right past them. Then
Drizzt, not wanting to push his luck too far, also slipped past
them, making his way through the door, noting with relief
that Zaknafein was not in attendance.
"All praises to the Spider Queen!" Briza yelled after him.
Drizzt paused and turned to meet her gaze. He bowed low
a second time. "As it should be” he muttered.
Creeping behind the small group, Zak had studied Drizzt's
every move, trying to measure the toll a decade at the Academy
had exacted on the young fighter.
Gone now was the customary smile that lit Drizzt's face.
Gone, too, Zak supposed, was the innocence that had kept
this one apart from the rest of Menzoberranzan.
Zak leaned back heavily against the wall in a side passage.
He had caught only portions of the conversation at the anteroom
door. Most clearly he had heard Drizzt's heartfelt accord
with Briza's honoring of Lloth.
"What have I done?" the weapon master asked himself. He
looked back around the bend in the main corridor, but the
door to the anteroom had already closed.
"Truly, when I look upon the drow-the drow warrior!-
that was my most treasured, I shame for my cowardice”
Zak lamented. "What has Drizzt lost that I might have
saved?"
He drew his smooth sword from its scabbard, his sensitive
fingers running the length of the razor edge. "A finer blade
you would be had you tasted the blood of Drizzt Do'Urden,
to deny this world, our world, another soul for its taking, to
free that one from the unending torments of life!" He lowered
the weapon's tip to the floor.
"But I am a coward” he said. "I have failed in the one act
that could have brought meaning to my pitiful existence.
The secondboy of House Do'Urden lives, it would appear,
but Drizzt Do'Urden, my 'Two-hands, is long dead” Zak
looked back to the emptiness where Drizzt had been standing,
the weapon master's expression suddenly a grimace.
"Yet this pretender lives.
"A drow warrior”
Zak's weapon clanged to the stone floor and his head
slumped down to be caught by the embrace of his open
palms, the only shield Zaknafein Do'Urden had ever found.
Drizzt spent the next day at rest, mostly in his room, trying
to keep out of the way of the other members of his immediate
family. Malice had dismissed him without a word in
their initial meeting, but Drizzt did not want to confront her
again. Likewise, he had little to say to Briza and Maya, fearing
that sooner or later they would begin to understand the
true connotations of his continuing stream of blasphemous
responses. Most of all, though, Drizzt did not want to see
Zaknafein, the mentor he had once thought of as his salvation
against the realities around him, the one glowing light
in the darkness that was Menzoberranzan.
That, too, Drizzt believed, had been only a lie.
On his second day home, when Narbondel, the time clock
of the city, had just begun its cycle of light, the door to
Drizzfs small chamber swung open and Briza walked in.
"An audience with Matron Malice” she said grimly.
A thousand thoughts rushed through Drizzts mind as he
grabbed his boots and followed his oldest sister down the
passageways to the house chapel. Had Malice and the others
discovered his true feelings toward their evil deity? What
punishments did they now have waiting for him? Unconsciously,
Drizzt eyed the spider carvings on the chapel's
arched entrance.
"You should be more familiar and more at ease with this
place” Briza scolded, noting his discomfort. "It is the place
of our people's highest glories”
Drizzt lowered his gaze and did not respond-and was
careful not to even think of the many stinging retorts he felt
in his heart.
His confusion doubled when they entered the chapel, for
Rizzen, Maya, and Zaknafein stood before the matron
mother, as expected. Beside them, though, stood Dinin and
Vierna.
"We are all present” Briza said, taking her place at her
mother's side.
"Kneel” Malice commanded, and the whole family fell to
its knees. The matron mother paced slowly around them all,
each pointedly dropping his or her eyes in reverence, or
just in common sense, as the great lady walked by.
Malice stopped beside Drizzt. "You are confused by the
presence of Dinin and Vierna” she said. Drizzt looked up at
her. "Do you not yet understand the subtle methods of our
survival?"
"I had thought that my brother and sister were to continue
on at the Academy” Drizzt explained.
"That would not be to our advantage” Malice replied.
"Does it not bring a house strength to have mistresses and
masters seated at the Academy?" Drizzt dared to ask.
"It does” replied Malice, "but it separates the power. You
have heard tidings of war?"
"I have heard hinting of trouble” said Drizzt, looking over
at Vierna, "though nothing more tangible”
"Hinting?" Malice huffed, angered that her son could not
understand the importance. "They are more than most
houses ever hear before the blade falls!" She spun away
from Drizzt and addressed the whole group. "The rumors
hold truth” she declared.
"Who?" asked Briza. "What house conspires against House
Do'Urden?"
"None behind us in rank” Dinin replied, though the question
had not been asked to him and it was not his place to
speak unbidden.
"How do you know this?" Malice asked, letting the oversight
pass. Malice understood Dinin's value and knew that
his contributions to this discussion would be important.
"We are the ninth house of the city” Dinin reasoned, "but
among our ranks we claim four high priestesses, two of
them former mistresses of Arach- Tinilith” He looked at Zak.
"We have, as well, two former masters of Melee-Magthere,
and Drizzt was awarded the highest laurels from the school
of fighters. Our soldiers number nearly four hundred, all
skilled and battle-tested. Only a few houses claim more”
"What is your point?" Briza asked sharply.
"We are the ninth house” Dinin laughed, "but few above
us could defeat us. . . “
" And none behind” Matron Malice finished for him. "You
show good judgment, Elderboy. I have come to the same
conclusions”
"One of the great houses fears House Do'Urden” Vierna
concluded. "It needs us gone to protect its own position”
"That is my belief” Malice answered. "An uncommon
practice, for family wars usually are initiated by the lowerranking
house, desiring a better position within the city hierarchy”
"Then we must take great care” Briza said.
Drizzt listened carefully to their words, trying to make
sense of it all. His eyes never left Zaknafein, though, who
knelt impassively at the side. What did the callous weapon
master think of all this? Drizzt wondered. Did the thought
of such a war thrill him, that he might be able to kill more
dark elves?
Whatever his feelings, Zak gave no outward clue. He sat
quietly and by all appearances was not even listening to the
conversation.
"It would not be Baenre” Briza said, her words sounding
like a plea for confirmation. "Certainly we have not yet become
a threat to them!"
"We must hope you are correct” Malice replied grimly, remembering
vividly her tour of the ruling house. "Likely, it is
one of the weaker houses above us, fearing its own unsteady
position. I have not yet been able to learn any incriminating
information against any in particular, so we must
prepare for the worst. Thus, I have called Vierna and Dinin
back to my side”
"If we learn of our enemies, . . “ Drizzt began impulsively.
All eyes snapped upon him. It was bad enough for the elderboy
to speak without being addressed, but for the secondboy,
just graduated from the Academy, the act could be
considered blasphemous.
Wanting all perspectives, Matron Malice again let the
oversight pass. "Continue” she prompted.
"If we discover which house plots against us” Drizzt said
quietly, "could we not expose it?"
"To what end?" Briza snarled at him. "Conspiracy without
action is no crime”
"Then might we use reason?" Drizzt pressed, continuing
against the barrage of incredulous glares that came at him
from every face in the room-except from Zak's. "If we are
the stronger, then let them submit without battle. Rank
House Do'Urden as it should be and let the assumed threat
to the weaker house be ended”
Malice grabbed Drizzt by the front of his cloak and
heaved him to his feet. "I forgive your foolish thoughts” she
growled, "this time!" She dropped him back to the floor, and
the silent reprimands of his siblings descended upon him.
Again, though, Zak's expression did not match the others
in the room. Indeed, Zak put a hand up over his mouth to
hide his amusement. Perhaps there remained a bit of the
Drizzt Do'Urden he had known, he dared to hope. Perhaps
the Academy had not fully tainted the young fighter's spirit.
Malice whirled on the rest of the family, simmering fury
and lust glowing in her eyes. "This is not the time to fear!
This” she cried, a slender finger pointing out from in front
of her face, "is the time to dream! We are House Do'Urden,
Daermon N'a'shezbaernon, of power beyond the understanding
of the great houses. We are the unknown entity of
this war. We hold every advantage!
"Ninth house?" she laughed. "In short time, only seven
houses will remain ahead of us!"
"What of the patrol?" Briza cut in. "Are we to allow the secondboy
to go off alone, exposed?"
"The patrol will begin our advantage” the conniving matron
explained. "Drizzt will go, and included in his group
will be a member of at least four of the houses above us”
"One may strike at him” Briza reasoned.
"No” Malice assured her. "Our enemies in the coming war
would not reveal themselves so clearly-not yet. The appointed
assassin would have to defeat two Do'Urdens in
such a confrontation”
"Two?" asked Vierna.
"Again, Lloth has shown us her favor” explained Malice.
"Dinin will lead Drizzt's patrol group”
The elderboy's eyes lit up at the news. "Then Drizzt and I
might become the assassins in this conflict” he purred.
The smile disappeared from the matron mother's face.
"You will not strike without my consent” she warned in a
tone so cold that Dinin fully understood the consequences
of disobedience, ''as you have done in the past”
Drizzt did not miss the reference to Nalfein, his murdered
brother. His mother knew! Malice had done nothing to punish
her murderous son. Now Drizzt's hand went up to his
face, to hide an expression of horror that only could have
brought him trouble in this setting.
"You are there to learn” Matron Malice said to Dinin, "to
protect your brother, as Drizzt is there to protect you. Do
not destroy our advantage for the gain of a single kill” An
evil smile found its way back onto her bone-hued face. "But,
if you learn of our enemy, . . “ she said.
"If the proper opportunity presents itself, . . “ Briza finished,
guessing her mother's wicked thoughts and throwing
an equally vile smile the matron's way.
Malice looked upon her eldest daughter with approval.
Briza would prove a fine successor for the house!
Dinin's smile became wide and lascivious. Nothing pleased
the elderboy of House Do'Urden more than the opportunity
for an assassination.
"Go, then, my family” Malice said. "Remember that unfriendly
eyes are upon us, watching our every move, waiting
for the time to strike”
Zak was the first out of the chapel, as always, this time
with an added spring in his step. It wasn't the prospect of
fighting another war that guided his moves, though the
thought of killing more clerics of the Spider Queen certainly
pleased him. Rather, Drizzt's display of naivete, his continued
misconceptions of the common weal of drow existence,
brought Zak hope.
Drizzt watched him go, thinking Zak's strides reflected
his desire to kill. Drizzt didn't know whether to follow and
confront the weapon master here and now or to let it pass,
to shrug it away as readily as he had dismissed most of the
cruel world around him. The decision was made for him
when Matron Malice stepped in front of him and kept him
in the chapel.
"To you, I say this” she began when they were alone. "You
have heard the mission I placed upon your shoulders. I will
not tolerate failure!"
Drizzt shrank back from the power of her voice.
"Protect your brother” came the grim warning, "or I shall
give you to Lloth for judgment”
Drizzt understood the implications, but the matron took
the pleasure to spell them out anyway.
"You would not enjoy your life as a drider”
A lightning blast cut across the still black waters of the underground
lake, searing the heads of the approaching water
trolls. Sounds of battle echoed through the cavern.
Drizzt had one monster-scrags, they were calledcornered
on a small peninsula, blocking the wretched
thing's path back to the water. Normally, a single drow faced
off evenly against a water troll would not have the advantage,
but as the others of his patrol group had come to see in
the past few weeks, Drizzt was no ordinary young drow.
The scrag came on, oblivious to its peril. A single, blinding
movement from Drizzt lopped off the creature's reaching
arms. Drizzt moved in quickly for the kill, knowing too well
the regenerative powers of trolls.
Then another scrag slipped out of the water at his back.
Drizzt had expected this, but he gave no outward indication
that he saw the second scrag coming. He kept his concentration
ahead of him, driving deep slashes into the
maimed and all but defenseless troll's torso.
Just as the monster behind him was about to latch its
claws onto him, Drizzt fell to his knees and cried, "Now!"
The concealed panther, crouched in the shadows at the
peninsula's base, did not hesitate. One great stride brought
Guenhwyvar into position, and it sprang, crashing heavily
onto the unsuspecting scrag, tearing the life from the thing
before it could respond to the attack.
Drizzt finished off his troll and turned to admire the panther's
work. He extended his hand, and the great cat nuzzled
it. How well the two fighters had come to know each
other! thought Drizzt.
Another blast of lightning thundered in, this one close
enough to steal Drizzt's sight.
"Guenhwyvar!" Masoj Hun'ett, the bolt's caster, cried. "To
my side!"
The panther managed to brush against Drizzt's leg as it
moved to obey. When his vision returned, Drizzt walked off
in the other direction, not wanting to view the scolding that
Guenhwyvar always seemed to receive when he and the cat
worked together.
Masoj watched Drizzt's back as he went, wanting to put a
third bolt right between the young Do'Urden's shoulder
blades. The wizard of House Hun'ett did not miss the specter
of Dinin Do'Urden, off to the side, watching with more
than casual glances.
"Learn your loyalties!" Masoj snarled at Guenhwyvar. To
often, the panther left the wizard's side to join in combat
with Drizzt. Masoj knew that the cat was better complemented
by the moves of a fighter, but he knew, too, the vulnerability
of a wizard involved in spellcasting. Masoj
wanted Guenhwyvar at his side, protecting him from
enemies-he shot another glance at Dinin-and "friends"
alike.
He threw the statuette to the ground at his feet. "Begone!"
he commanded.
In the distance, Drizzt had engaged another scrag and
made short work of it as well. Masoj shook his head as he
watched the display of swordsmanship. Every day, Drizzt
grew stronger.
"Give the order to kill him soon, Matron SiNafay” Masoj
whispered. The young wizard did not know how much
longer he would be able to carry out the task. Masoj wondered
whether he could win the fight even now.
Drizzt shielded his eyes as he struck a torch to seal a dead
troll's wounds. Only fire ensured that trolls would not recuperate,
even from the grave.
The other battles had died away as well, Drizzt noted, and
he saw the flames of torches springing up all across the
bank of the lake. He wondered if all of his twelve drow companions
had survived, though he also wondered if he truly
cared. Others were more than ready to take their places.
Drizzt knew that the only companion who really
mattered-Guenhwyvar-was safely back in its home on
the Astral Plane.
"Form a guard!" came Dinin's echoing command as the
slaves, goblins, and orcs moved in to search for troll treasure,
and to salvage whatever they might of the scrags.
When the fires had consumed the scrag he'd set ablaze,
Drizzt dipped his torch in the black water, then paused for a '
moment to let his eyes readjust to the darkness. "Another
day” he said softly, "another enemy defeated”
He liked the excitement of patrolling, the thrill of the edge
of danger, and the knowledge that he was now putting his
weapons to use against vile monsters.
Even here, though, Drizzt could not escape the lethargy
that had come to pervade his life, the general resignation
that marked his every step. For, though his battles these
days were fought against the horrors of the Underdark,
monsters killed of necessity, Drizzt had not forgotten the
meeting in the chapel of House Do'Urden.
He knew that his scimitars soon would be put to use
against the flesh of drow elves.
Zaknafein looked out over Menzoberranzan, as he so often
did when Drizzt's patrol group was out of the city. Zak
was torn between wanting to sneak out of the house to fight
at Drizzt's side, and hoping that the patrol would return
with the news that Drizzt had been slain.
Would Zak ever find the answer to the dilemma of the
youngest Do'Urden? he wondered. Zak knew that he could
not leave the house; Matron Malice was keeping a very close
eye on him. She sensed his anguish over Drizzt, Zak knew,
and she most definitely did not approve. Zak was often her
lover, but they shared little other than that.
Zak thought back to the battles he and Malice had fought
over Vierna, another child of common concern, centuries
before. Vierna was a female, her fate sealed from the moment
of her birth, and Zak could do nothing to halt the assault
of the Spider Queen's overwhelming religion.
Did Malice fear that he might have better luck influencing
the actions of a male child? Apparently the matron did, but
even Zak was not so certain if her fears were justified; even
he couldn't measure his influence over Drizzt.
He peered out over the city now, silently watching for the
patrol group's return-waiting, as always, for Drizzt's safe
return, but secretly hoping, that his dilemma would be
ended by the claws and fangs of a lurking monster.
Chapter 18
The Black Room
"My greetings, Faceless One” the high priestess said,
pushing past Alton into his private chambers in Sorcere.
"And mine to you, Mistress Vierna” Alton replied, trying
to keep the fear out of his voice. Vierna Do'Urden coming to
see him at this time had to be more than coincidence. "What
act has brought me the honor of a visit from a mistress of
Arach- Tinilith?"
"No longer a mistress” said Vierna. "I have returned to my
home”
Alton paused to consider the news. He knew that Dinin
Do'Urden had also resigned his position at the Academy.
"Matron Malice has brought her family back together”
Vierna continued. "There are stirrings of war. You have
heard them, no doubt?"
"Just rumors” Alton stuttered, now beginning to understand
why Vierna had come to call on him. House Do'Urden
had used the Faceless One before in its plotting-in its attempt
to assassinate Alton! Now, with rumors of war whispered
throughout Menzoberranzan, Matron Malice was
re-establishing her network of spies and assassins.
"You know of them?" Vierna asked sharply.
"I have heard little” Alton breathed, careful now not to
anger the powerful female. "Not enough to report to your
house. I did not even suspect that House Do'Urden was involved
until now, when you informed me” Alton could only
hope that Vierna had no detection spell aimed at his words.
Vierna relaxed, apparently appeased by the explanation.
"Listen more carefully to the rumors, Faceless One” she
said. "My brother and I have left the Academy; you are to be
the eyes and ears of House Do'Urden in this place”
"But. . “ Alton stuttered.
Vierna held up a hand to stop him. "We know of our failure
in our last transaction” she said. She bowed low, something
a high priestess rarely did to a male. "Matron Malice
sends her deepest apologies that the unguent you received
for the assassination of Alton DeVirdid not restore the features
to your face”
Alton nearly choked on the words, now understanding
why an unknown messenger had delivered the jar of healing
salve some thirty years before. The cloaked figure was
an agent of House Do'Urden, come to repay the Faceless
One for his assassination of Alton! Of course, Alton had
never even tried the unguent. With his luck, it would have
worked, and would have restored the features of Alton
DeVir.
"This time, your payment cannot fail” Vierna went on,
though Alton, too caught up in the irony of it all, hardly listened.
"House Do'Urden possesses a wizard's staff but no
wizard worthy to wield it. It belonged to Nalfein, my
brother, who died in the victory over DeVir”
Alton wanted to strike out at her. Even he wasn't that stupid,
though.
"If you can discern which house plots against House
Do'Urden” Vierna promised, "the staff will be yours! A treasure
indeed for such a small act”
"I will do what I can” Alton replied, having no other response
to the incredible offer.
"That is all Matron Malice asks of you” said Vierna, and
she left the wizard, quite certain that House Do'Urden had
secured a capable agent within the Academy.
"Dinin and Vierna Do'Urden have resigned their positions”
said Alton excitedly as the diminutive matron mother
came to him later that same evening.
"This is already known to me” replied SiNafay Hun'ett.
She looked around disdainfully at the littered and scorched
room, then took a seat at the small table.
"There is more” Alton said quickly, not wanting SiNafay to
get upset about being disturbed over old news. "I have had a
visitor this day, Mistress Vierna Do'Urden'"
"She suspects?" Matron SiNafay growled.
"No, no!" Alton replied. "Quite the opposite. House Do'Urden
wishes to employ me as a spy, as it once employed the
Faceless One to assassinate me'"
SiNafay paused for a moment, stunned, then issued a
laugh straight from her belly. "Ah, the ironies of our lives!"
she roared.
"I had heard that Dinin and Vierna were sent to the Academy
only to oversee the education of their younger
brother” remarked Alton.
"An excellent cover” SiNafay replied. "Vierna and Dinin
were sent as spies for the ambitious Matron Malice. My
compliments to her”
"Now they suspect trouble” Alton stated, sitting opposite
his matron mother.
"They do” agreed SiNafay. "Masoj patrols with Drizzt, but
House Do'Urden has also managed to plant Dinin in the
group”
"Then Masoj is in danger” reasoned Alton.
"No” said SiNafay. "House Do'Urden does not know that
House Hun'ell perpetrates the threat against it, else it would
not have come to you for information. Matron Malice
knows your identity”
A look of terror crossed Alton's face.
"Not your true identity” SiNafay laughed at him. "She
knows the Faceless One as Gelroos Hun'ell, and she would
not have come to a Hun'ell if she suspected our house”
"Then we have an excellent opportunity to throw House
Do'Urden into chaos!" Alton cried. "If I implicate another
house, even Baenre, perhaps, our position will be strengthened”
He chuckled at the possibilities. "Malice will reward
me with a staff of great power-a weapon I will turn against
her at the proper moment!"
"Matron Malice!" SiNafay corrected sternly. Even though
she and Malice were soon to be open enemies, SiNafay
would not permit a male to show such disrespect to a matron
mother. "Do you really believe that you could carry out
such a deception?"
"When Mistress Vierna returns. . “
"You will not deal with a lesser priestess with such valued
information, foolish DeVir. You will face Matron Malice herself,
a formidable foe. If she sees through your lies, do you
know what she will do to your body?"
Alton gulped audibly. "I am willing to take the risk” he
said, crossing his arms resolutely on the table.
"What of House Hun'ett when the biggest lie is revealed?"
SiNafay asked. "What advantage will we enjoy when Matron
Malice knows the Faceless One's true identity?"
"I understand” Alton answered, crestfallen but unable to
refute SiNafay's logic. "Then what are we to do? What am I
to do?"
Matron SiNafay was already considering their next
moves. "You will resign your tenure” she said at length. "Return
to House Hun'ett, within my protection”
"Such an act might also implicate House Hun'ett to Matron
Malice” Alton reasoned.
"It may” replied SiNafay, "but it is the safest route. I will go
to Matron Malice in feigned anger, telling her to leave House
Hun'ett out of her troubles. If she wishes to make an informant
of a member of my family, then she should come to me
for permission-though I'll not grant it this time!"
SiNafay smiled at the possibilities of such an encounter.
"My anger, my fear, alone could implicate a greater house
against House Do'Urden, even a conspiracy between more
than one house” she said, obviously enjoying the added benefits.
"Matron Malice will certainly have much to think
about, and much to worry about!"
Alton hadn't even heard SiNafay's last comments. The
words about granting her permission "this time" had
brought a disturbing notion into his mind. " And did she?" he
dared to ask, though his words were barely audible.
"What do you mean?" asked SiNafay, not following his
thoughts.
"Did Matron Malice come to you?" Alton continued,
frightened but needing an answer. "Thirty years ago. Did
Matron SiNafay grant her permission for Gelroos Hun'ett to
becom~ an agent, an assassin to complete House DeVir's
elimination?"
A wide smile spread across SiNafay's face, but it vanished
in the blink of an eye as she threw the table across the room,
grabbed Alton by the front of his robes, and pulled him
roughly to within an inch of her scowling visage.
"Never confuse personal feelings with politics!" the tiny
but obviously strong matron growled, her tone carrying the
unmistakable weight of an open threat. And never ask me
such a question again!"
She threw Alton to the floor but didn't release him from
her penetrating glare.
Alton had known all along that he was merely a pawn in
the intrigue between House Hun'ett and House Do'Urden, a
necessary link for Matron SiNafay to carry out her treacherous
plans. Every now and then, though, Alton's personal
grudge against House Do'Urden caused him to forget his
lowly place in this conflict. Looking up now at SiNafay's
bared power, he realized that he had overstepped the
bounds of his position.
At the back end of the mushroom grove, the southern
wall of the cavern that housed Menzoberranzan, was a
small, heavily guarded cave. Beyond the ironbound doors
stood a single room, used only for gatherings of the city's
eight ruling matron mothers.
The smoke of a hundred sweet-smelling candles permeated
the air; the matron mothers liked it that way. After almost
half a century of studying scrolls in the candlelight of
Sorcere, Alton did not mind the light, but he was indeed uncomfortable
in the chamber. He sat at the back end of a
spider-shaped table, in a small, unadorned chair reserved
for guests of the council. Between the table's eight hairy legs
were the ruling matron mothers' thrones, all jeweled and
dazzling in the candlelight.
The matrons filed in, pompous and wicked, casting belittling
glares at the male. SiNafay, at Alton's side, put a hand
on his knee and gave him a reassuring wink. She would not
have dared to request a gathering of the ruling council if she
was not certain of the worthiness of her news. The ruling
matron mothers viewed their seats as honorary in nature
and did not appreciate being brought together except in
times of crisis.
At the head of the spider table sat Matron Baenre, the
most powerful figure in all of Menzoberranzan, an ancient
and withered female with malicious eyes and a mouth unaccustomed
to smiles.
"We are gathered, SiNafay” Baenre said when all eight
members had found their appointed chairs. "For what reason
have you summoned the council?"
"To discuss a punishment” SiNafay replied.
"Punishment?" Matron Baenre echoed, confused. The recent
years had been unusually quiet in the drow city, without
an incident since the Thken'duis-Freth conflict. To the
First Matron's knowledge, no acts had been committed that
might require a punishment, certainly none so blatant as to
force the ruling council to action. "What individual deserves
this?"
"Not an individual” explained Matron SiNafay. She
glanced around at her peers, measuring their interest. "A
house” she said bluntly. "Daerrnon N'a'shezbaernon, House
Do'Urden” Several gasps of disbelief came in reply, as SiNafay
had expected.
"House Do'Urden?" Matron Baenre questioned, surprised
that any would implicate Matron Malice. By all of Baenre's
knowledge, Malice remained in high regard with the Spider
Queen, and House Do'Urden had recently placed two instructors
in the Academy.
"For what crime do you dare to charge House Do'Urden?"
asked one of the other matrons.
Are these words of fear, SiNafay?" Matron Baenre had to
ask. Several of the ruling matrons had expressed concern
about House Do'Urden. It was well known that Matron Malice
desired a seat on the ruling council, and, by all measures
of the power of her house, she seemed destined to get it.
"I have appropriate cause” SiNafay insisted.
"The others seem to doubt you” replied Matron Baenre.
"You should explain your accusation-quickly, if you value
your reputation”
SiNafay knew that more than her reputation was at stake;
in Menzoberranzan, a false accusation was a crime on par
with murder. "We all remember the fall of House DeVir”
SiNafay began. "Seven of us now gathered sat upon the ruling
council beside Matron Ginafae DeVir”
"House DeVir is no more” Matron Baenre reminded her.
"Because of House Do'Urden” SiNafay said bluntly.
This time the gasps came out as open anger.
"How dare you speak such words?" came one reply.
"Thirty years!" came another. "The issue has been
forgotten!"
Matron Baenre quieted them all before the clamor rose
into violent action-a not uncommon occurrence in the
council chamber. "SiNafay” she said through the dry sneer
on her lips. "One cannot make such an accusation; one cannot
discuss such beliefs openly so long after the event! You
know our ways. If House Do'Urden did indeed commit this
act, as you insist, it deserves our compliments, not our punishment,
for it carried it through to perfection. House DeVir
is no more, I say. It does not exist"
Alton shifted uneasily, caught somewhere between rage
and despair. SiNafay was far from dismayed, though; this
was going exactly as she had envisioned and hoped.
"Oh, but it does!" she responded, rising to her feet. She
pulled the hood from Alton's head. "In this person!"
"Gelroos?" asked Matron Baenre, not understanding.
"Not Gelroos” SiNafay replied. "Gelroos Hun'ett died the
night House DeVir died. This male, Alton DeVir, assumed
Gelroos's identity and position, hiding from further attacks
by House Do'Urden!"
Baenre whispered some instructions to the matron at her
right side, then waited as she went through the semantics of
a spell. Baenre motioned for Sinafay to return to her seat,
then faced Alton.
"Speak your name” Baenre commanded.
"I am Alton DeVir” Alton said, gaining strength from the
identity he had waited so very long to proclaim, "son of Matron
Ginafae and a student of Sorcere on the night House
Do'Urden attacked”
Baenre looked to the matron at her side.
"He speaks the truth” the matron assured her. Whispers
sprang up all around the spider table, of amusement more
than anything else.
"That is why I summoned the ruling council” SiNafay
quickly explained.
"Very well, SiNafay” said Matron Baenre. "My compliments
to you, Alton DeVir, on your resourcefulness and
ability to survive. For a male, you have shown great courage
and wisdom. Surely you both know that the council cannot
exact punishment upon a house for a deed committed so
long ago. Why would we so desire? Matron Malice Do'Urden
sits in the favor of the Spider Queen; her house shows
great promise. You must reveal to us greater need if you
wish any punishment against House Do'Urden”
"I do not wish such a thing” SiNafay quickly replied. "This
matter, thirty years removed, is no longer in the realm of
the ruling council. House Do'Urden does indeed show
promise, my peers, with four high priestesses and a host of
other weapons, not the least of which being their second
boy, Drizzt, first graduate of his class” She had purpose,
mentioned Drizzt, knowing that the name would strike a
wound in Matron Baenre. Baenre's own prized son, Berg'i
nyon, had spent the last nine years ranked behind the won
derful young Do'Urden.
"Then why have you bothered us?" Matron Baenre de
manded, an unmistakable edge in her voice.
"To ask you to close your eyes” SiNafay purred. "Alton is a
Hun'ett now, under my protection. He demands vengeance
for the act committed against his family, and, as a surviving
member of the attacked family, he has the right of accusa.
tion”
"House Hun'ett will stand beside him?" Matron Baenre
asked, turning curious and amused.
"Indeed” replied SiNafay. "Thus is House Hun'ett bound!"
"Vengeance?" another matron quipped, also now more
amused than angered. "Or fear? It would seem to my ears
that the matron of House Hun'ett uses this pitiful DeVir
creature for her own gain. House Do'Urden aspires to
higher ranking, and Matron Malice desires to sit upon the
ruling council, a threat to House Hun'ett, perhaps?"
"Be it vengeance or prudence, my claim-Alton DeVir's
claim-must be deemed as legitimate” replied SiNafay, "to
our mutual gain” She smiled wickedly and looked straight
to the First Matron. "To the gain of our sons, perhaps, in
their quest for recognition”
"Indeed” replied Matron Baenre in a chuckle that
sounded more like a cough. A war between Hun'ett and
Do'Urden might be to everyone's gain, but not, Baenre suspected,
as SiNafay believed. Malice was a powerful matron,
and her family truly deserved a ranking higher than ninth.
If the fight did come, Malice probably would get her seat on
the council, replacing SiNafay.
Matron Baenre looked around at the other matrons, and
guessed from their hopeful expressions that they shared
her thoughts. Let Hun'ett and Do'Urden fight it out; whatever
the outcome, the threat of Matron Malice would be
ended. Perhaps, Baenre hoped, a certain young Do'Urden
male would fall in battle, propelling her own son into the position
he deserved.
Then the First Matron spoke the words SiNafay had come
to hear, the silent permission of Menzoberranzan's ruling
council.
"This matter is settled, my sisters” Matron Baenre declared,
to the accepting nods of all at the table. "It is good
that we never met this day”
Chapter 19
Promises of Glory
"Have you found the trail?" Drizzt whispered, moving up
beside the great panther. He gave Guenhwyvar a pat on the
side and knew from the slackness of the cat's muscles that
no danger was nearby.
"Gone, then” Drizzt said, staring off into the emptiness of
the corridor in front of them. "'Wicked gnomes: my
brother called them when we found the tracks by the pool.
Wicked and stupid” He sheathed his scimitar and knelt beside
the panther, his arm comfortable draped across
Guenhwyvar's back. "They're smart enough to elude our patrol”
The cat looked up as if it had understood his every word,
and Drizzt rubbed a hand roughly over Guenhwyvar's, his
finest friend's, head. Drizzt remembered clearly his elation
on the day, a week before, when Dinin had announced-to
Masoj Hun'ett's outrage-that Guenhwyvar would be deployed
at the patrol's point position beside Drizzt.
"The cat is mine!" Masoj had reminded Dinin.
"You are mine!" Dinin, the patrol leader, had replied, ending
any further debate. Whenever the figurine's magic
would permit, Masoj summoned Guenhwyvar from the Astral
Plane and bid the cat to run up in front, bringing Drizzt
an added degree of safety and a valued companion.
Drizzt knew from the unfamiliar heat patterns on the
wall that they had gone the limit of their patrol route. He
had purposely put a lot of ground, more than was advised,
between himself and the rest of the patrol. Drizzt had confidence
that he and Guenhwyvar could take care of themselves,
and with the others far behind, he could relax and
enjoy the wait. The minutes Drizzt spent in solitude gave
him the time he needed in his endless effort to sort through
his confused emotions. Guenhwyvar, seemingly non- .
judgmental and always approving, offered Drizzt a perfect
audience for his audible contemplations.
"I begin to wonder the worth of it all” Drizzt whispered to
the cat. "I do not doubt the value of these Patrols-this week
alone, we have defeated a dozen monsters that might have
brought great harm to the city-but to what end?"
He looked deeply into the panther's saucer eyes and
found sympathy there, and Drizzt knew that Guenhwyvar
somehow understood his dilemma.
"Perhaps I still do not know who I am” Drizzt mused, "or
who my people are. Every time I find a clue to the truth, it
leads me down a path that I dare not continue upon, to conclusions
I cannot accept”
"You are drow” came a reply behind them. Drizzt turned
abruptly to see Dinin a few feet away, a look of grave concern
on his face. '
"The gnomes have fled beyond our reach” Drizzt said,
trying to deflect his brother's concerns. '
"Have you not learned what it means to be a drow?" Dinin
asked. "Have you not come to understand the course of our
history and the promise of our future?"
"I know of our history as it was taught at the Academy”
Drizzt replied. "They were the very first lessons we received.
Of our future, and more so of the place we now reside,
though, I do not understand”
"You know of our enemies” Dinin prompted.
"Countless enemies” replied Drizzt with a heavy sigh.
"They fill the holes of the Underdark, always waiting for us
to let down our guard. We will not, and our enemies will fall i
to our power”
" Ah, but our true enemies do not reside in the lightless caverns
of our world” said Dinin with a sly smile. "Theirs is a
world strange and evil” Drizzt knew who Dinin was referring
to, but he suspected that his brother was hiding something.
"The faeries” Drizzt whispered, and the word prompted a
jumble of emotions within him. All of his life, he had been
told of his evil cousins, of how they had forced the drow
into the bowels of the world. Busily engaged in the duties of
his everyday life, Drizzt did not think of them often, but
whenever they came to mind, he used their name as a litany
against everything he hated in his life. If Drizzt could somehow
blame the surface elves-as every other drow seemed
to blame them-for the injustices of drow society, he could
find hope for the future of his people. Rationally, Drizzt had
to dismiss the stirring legends of the elven war as another of
the endless stream of lies, but in his heart and hopes, Drizzt
clung desperately to those words.
He looked back to Dinin. "The faeries” he said again,
"whatever they may be”
Dinin chuckled at his brother's relentless sarcasm; it had
become so commonplace. "They are as you have learned”
he assured Drizzt. "Without worth and vile beyond your
imagination, the tormentors of our people, who banished us
in eons past; who forced-"
"I know the tales” Drizzt interrupted, alarmed at the increasing
volume of his excited brother's voice. Drizzt
glanced over his shoulder. "If the patrol is ended, let us meet
the others closer to the city. This place is too dangerous for
such discussions” He rose to his feet and started back,
Guenhwyvar at his side.
"Not as dangerous as the place I soon will lead you” Dinin
replied with that same sly smile.
Drizzt stopped and looked at him curiously.
"I suppose you should know” Dinin teased. "We were selected
because we are the finest of the patrol groups, and
you have certainly played an important role in our attaining
that honor”
"Chosen for what?"
"In a fortnight, we will leave Menzoberranzan” explained
Dinin. "Our trail will take us many days and many miles
from the city”
"How long'?" Qrizzt asked, suddenly very curious.
Two weeks, maybe three” replied Dinin, "but well worth
the time. We shall be the ones, my young brother, who enact
a measure of revenge upon our most hated foes, who strike
a glorious blow for the Spider Queen!"
Drizzt thought that he understood, but the notion was too
outrageous for him to be certain.
"The elves!" Dinin beamed. "We have been chosen for
surface raid!"
Drizzt was not as openly excited as his brother, unsure of
the implications of such a mission. At last he would get to
view the surface elves and face the truth of his heart and
hopes. Something more real to Drizzt, the disappointment
he had known for so many years, tempered his elation, reminded
him that while the truth of the elves might bring an
excuse to the dark world of his kin, it might instead take
away something more important. He was unsure how to feel.
"The surface” Alton mused. "My sister went there onceon
a raid. A most marvelous experience, so she said” He
looked at Masoj, not knowing how to figure the forlorn expression
on the young Hun'ett's face. "Now your patrol
makes the journey. I envy you”
"I am not going” Masoj declared.
"Why?" Alton gasped. "This is a rare opportunity indeed.
Menzoberranzan-to the anger of Lloth, I am certain-has
not staged a surface raid in two decades. It may be twenty
more years before the next, and by then you will no longer
be among the patrols”
Masoj looked out from the small window of Alton's room
in House Hun'ett, surveying the compound.
"Besides” Alton continued quietly, "up there, so far from
prying eyes, you might find the chance to dispose of two
Do'Urden's. Why would you not go?"
"Have you forgotten a ruling that you played a part in?"
Masoj asked, whirling on Alton accusingly. Two decades
ago, the masters of Sorcere decided that no wizards are to travel anywhere near
the surface!"
"Of course” Alton replied, remembering the meeting. Sorcere
seemed so distant to him now, though he had been,
within the Hun'ett house for only a few weeks. "We concluded
that drow magic may work differentlyunexpectedly-
under the open sky” he explained. "On that
raid twenty years ago-"
"I know the story” Masoj growled, and he finished the sentence
for Alton. "A wizard's fireball expanded beyond its
normal dimensions, killing several drow. Dangerous sideeffects,
you masters called it, though I've a belief that the
wizard conveniently disposed of some enemies under the
guise of an accident!"
"Yes” Alton agreed. "So said the rumors. In the absence of
evidence. . “ He let the thought go, seeing that he was doing
little to comfort Masoj. "That was so long ago” he said, trying
to offer some hope. "Have you no recourse?"
"None” Masoj replied. "Things move so very slowly in
Menzoberranzan; I doubt that the masters have even begun.
their investigation into the matter.
"A pity” Alton said. "It would have been the perfect opportunity”
"No more of that!" Masoj scolded. "Matron SiNafay has not
given me her command to eliminate Drizzt Do'Urden or his
brother. You have already been warned to keep your personal
desires to yourself. When the matron bids me to
strike, I will not fail her. Opportunities can be created
"You speak as if you already know how Drizzt Do'Urden
will die” Alton said.
An smile spread over Masoj's face as he reached into the
pocket of his robe and produced the onyx figurine, his unthinking
magical slave, which the foolish Drizzt had come to
trust so dearly. "Oh, I do” he replied, giving the statuette of
Guenhwyvar an easy toss, then catching it and holding it out
on display.
"I do.”
The members of the chosen raiding party quickly came to
realize that this would be no ordinary mission. They did not
go out on patrol from Menzoberranzan at all during the
next week. Rather, they remained, day and night, sequestered
within a barrack of Melee-Magthere. Through nearly
every waking hour, the raiders huddled around an oval table
in a conference room, hearing the detailed plans of their
pending adventure, and, over and over again, Master Hatch'net,
the master of Lore, spinning his tales of the vile
elves.
Drizzt listened intently to the stories, allowing himself,
forcing himself, to fall within Hatch'net's hypnotic web. The
tales had to be true; Drizzt did not know what he would
hold onto to preserve his principles if they were not.
Dinin presided over the raid's tactical preparations, displaying
maps of the long tunnels the group would travel,
grilling them over and over until they had memorized the
route perfectly.
To this, as well, the eager raiders-except for Drizztlistened
intently, all the while fighting to keep their excitement
from bursting out in a wild cheer. As the week of
preparations neared its end, Drizzt took note that one member
of the patrol group had not been attending. At first,
Drizzt had reasoned that Masoj was learning his duties in
the raid in Sorcere, with his old masters. With the departure
time fast approaching and the battle plans clearly taking
shape, though, Drizzt began to understand that Masoj
would not be joining them.
"Where is our wizard?" Drizzt dared to ask in the late
hours of one session.
Dinin, not appreciating 1he interruption, glared at his
brother. "Masoj will not be joining us” he answered, knowing
that others might now share Drizzt's concern, a distraction
they could not afford at such a critical time.
"Sorcere has decreed that no wizards may travel to the
surface, Master Hatch'net explained. "Masoj Hun'ett will
await your return in the city. It is a great loss to you indeed,
for Masoj has proven his worth many times over. Fear not,
though, for a cleric of Arach- Tinilith shall accompany you.
"What of . . Drizzt began above the approving whispers
of the other raiders.
Dinin cut his brother's thoughts short, easily guessing the
question. "The cat belongs to Masoj” he said flatly. "The cat
stays behind.
"I could talk to Masoj” Drizzt pleaded.
Dinin's stern glance answered the question without the
need for words. "Our tactics will be different on the surface”
he said to all the group, silencing their whispers. "The
surface is a world of distance, not the blind enclosures of
bending tunnels. Once our enemies are spotted, our task
will be to surround them, to close off the distances” He
looked straight at his young brother. "We will have no need
of a point guard, and in such a conflict, a spirited cat could
well prove more trouble than aid”
Drizzt had to be satisfied with the answer. Arguing would
not help, even if he could get Masoj to let him take the
panther-which he knew in his heart he could not. He
shook the brooding desires out of his head and forced himself
to hear his brother's words. This was to be the greatest
challenge of Drizzt's young life, and the greatest danger.
Over the final two days, as the battle plan became ingrained
into every thought, Drizzt found himself growing
more and more agitated. Nervous energy kept his palms
moist with sweat, and his eyes darted about, too alert.
Despite his disappointment over Guenhwyvar, Drizzt
could not deny the excitement that bubbled within him.
This was the adventure he had always wanted, the answer
to his questions of the truth of his people. Up there, in the
vast strangeness of that foreign world, lurked the surface
elves, the unseen nightmare that had become the common
enemy, and thus the common bond, of all the drow. Drizzt
would discover the glory of battle, exacting proper revenge
upon his people's most hated foes. Always before, Drizzt
had fought out of necessity, in training gyms or against the
stupid monsters that ventured too near his home.
Drizzt knew that this encounter would be different. This
time his thrusts and cuts would be carried by the strength
of deeper emotions, guided by the honor of his people and
their common courage and resolve to strike back against
their oppressors. He had to believe that.
Drizzt lay back in his cot the night before the raiding party's
departure and brought his scimitars through some
slow-motion maneuvers above him.
"This time” he whispered aloud to the blades while marveling
at their intricate dance even at such a slow speed.
"This time your ring will sound out in the song of justice!"
He placed the scimitars down at the side of his cot and
rolled over to find some needed sleep. "This time” he said
again, teeth clenched and eyes shining with determination.
Were his proclamations his belief or his hope? Drizzt had
dismissed the disturbing question the very first time it had
entered his thoughts, having no more room for doubts than
he had for brooding. He no longer considered the possibility
of disappointment; it had no place in the heart of a drow
warrior.
To Dinin, though, studying Drizzt curiously from the
shadows of the doorway, it sounded as if his younger
brother was trying to convince himself of the truth of his
own words.
Chapter 20
That Foreign World
The fourteen members of the patrol group made their
way through twisting tunnels and giant caverns that suddenly
opened wide before them. Silent on magical boots and
nearly invisible behind their piwafwis, they communicated
only in their hand code. For the most part, the ground's
slope was barely perceptible, though at times the group
climbed straight up rocky chimneys, every step and every
handhold drawing them nearer their goal. They crossed
through the boundaries of claimed territories, of monsters
and the other races, but the hated gnomes and even the
duergar dwarves wisely kept their heads hidden. Few in all
the Underdark would purposely intercept a drow raiding
party.
By the end of a week, all of the drow could sense the difference
in their surroundings. The depth still would have
seemed stifling to a surface dweller, but the dark elves were
accustomed to the constant oppression of a thousand thousand
tons of rock hanging over their heads. They turned
every corner expecting the stone ceiling to flyaway into the
vast openness of the surface world.
Breezes wafted past them-not the sulfur-smelling hot
winds rising off the magma of deep earth, but moist air,
scented with a hundred aromas unknown to the drow. It
was springtime above, though the dark elves, in their seasonless
environs, knew nothing of that, and the air was full
of the scents of new-blossomed flowers and budding trees.
In the seductive allure of those tantalizing aromas, Drizzt
had to remind himself again and again that the place they
approached was wholly evil and dangerous. Perhaps, he
thought, the scents were merely a diabolical lure, a bait to
an unsuspecting creature to bring it into the surface world's
murderous grip.
The cleric of Arach-Tinilith who was traveling with the
raiding party walked near to one wall and pressed her face
against every crack she encountered. "This one will suffice”
she said a short time later. She cast a spell of seeing and
looked into the tiny crack, no more than a finger's width, a
second time.
"How are we to get through that?" one of the patrol memo
bers signaled to another. Dinin caught the gestures and
ended the silent conversation with a scowl.
"It is daylight above” the cleric announced. "We shall have
to wait here”
"For how long?" Dinin asked, knowing his patrol to be on
the edge of readiness with their long-awaited goal so very
near.
"I cannot know” the cleric replied. "No more than half a
cycle of Narbondel. Let us remove our packs and rest while
we may”
Dinin would have preferred to continue, just to keep his
troops busy, but he did not dare speak against the priestess.
The break did not prove a long one, though, for a couple of
hours later, the cleric checked through the crack once more
and announced that the time had come.
"You first” Dinin said to Drizzt. Drizzt looked at his
brother incredulously, having no idea of how he could pass
through such a tiny crack.
"Come” instructed the cleric, who now held a many-holed
orb. "Walk past me and continue through”
As Drizzt passed the cleric, she spoke the orb's command
word and held it over Drizzt's head. Black flakes, blacker
than Drizzt's ebony skin, drifted over him, and he felt a tremendous
shudder ripple across his spine.
The others looked on in amazement as Drizzt's body narrowed
to the width of a hair and he became a twodimensional
image, a shadow of his former self.
Drizzt did not understand what was happening, but the
crack suddenly widened before him. He slipped into it,
found movement in his present form merely an enactment
of will, and, drifted through the twists, turns, and bends of
the tiny channel like a shadow on the broken face of a rocky
cliff. He then was in a long cave, standing across from its single
exit.
A moonless night had fallen, but even this seemed bright
to the deep-dwelling drow. Drizzt felt himself pulled toward
the exit, toward the surface world's openness. The
other raiders began slipping through the crack and into the
cavern then, one by one with the cleric coming in last.
Drizzt was the first to feel the shudder as his body resumed
its natural state. In a few moments, they all were eagerly
checking their weapons.
"I will remain here” the cleric told Dinin. "Hunt well. The
Spider Queen is watching”
Dinin warned his troops once again of the dangers of the
surface, then he moved to the front of the cave, a small hole
on the side of a rocky spur of a tall mountain. "For the Spider
Queen” Dinin proclaimed. He took a steadying breath
and led them through the exit, under the open sky.
Under the stars! While the others seemed nervous under
those revealing lights, Drizzt found his gaze pulled heavenward
to the countless points of mystical twinkling. Bathed
in the starlight, he felt his heart lift and didn't even notice
the joyful singing that rode on the night wind, so fitting it
seemed.
Dinin heard the song, and he was experienced enough to
recognize it as the eldritch calling of the surface elves. He
crouched and surveyed the horizon, picking out the light of
a single fire down in the distant expanse of a wooded valley.
He nudged his troops to action-and pointedly nudged the
wonderment from his brother's eyes-and started them off.
Drizzt could see the anxiety on his companions' faces, so
contrasted by his own inexplicable sense of serenity. He suspected
at once that something was very wrong with the
whole situation. In his heart Drizzt had known from the
minute he had stepped out of the tunnel that this was not
the vile world the masters at the Academy had taken such
pains to describe. He did feel unusual with no stone ceiling
above him, but not uncomfortable. If the stars, calling to his
heartstrings, were indeed reminders of what the next day
might bring, as Master Hatch'net had said, then surely the
next day would not be so terrible.
Only confusion dampened the feeling of freedom that
Drizzt felt, for either he had somehow fallen into a trap of
perception, or his companions, his brother included,
viewed their surroundings through tainted eyes.
It fell on Drizzt as another unanswered burden: were his
feelings of comfort here weakness or truth of heart?
"They are akin to the mushroom groves of our home”
Dinin assured the others as they tentatively moved under
the perimeter boughs of a small forest, "neither sentient nor
harmful”
Still, the younger dark elves flinched and brought their
weapons to the ready whenever a squirrel skipped across a
branch overheard or an unseen bird called out to the night.
The dark elves' was a silent world, far different from the
chattering life of a springtime forest, and in the Underdark,
nearly every living thing could, and most certainly would,
try to harm anything invading its lair. Even a cricket's chirp
sounded ominous to the alert ears of the drow.
Dinin's course was true, and soon the faerie song
drowned out every other sound and the light of a fire became
visible through the boughs. Surface elves were the
most alert of the races, and a human-or even a sneaky
halfling-would have had little chance of catching them unawares.
The raiders this night were drow, more skilled in stealth
than the most proficient alley thief. Their footfalls went unheard,
even across beds of dry, fallen leaves, and their
crafted armor, shaped perfectly to the contours of their
slender bodies, bent with their movements without a rustle.
Unnoticed, they lined the perimeter of the small glade,
where a score of faeries danced and sang.
Transfixed by the sheer joy of the elves' play, Drizzt
hardly noticed the commands his brother issued then in the
silent code. Several children danced among the gathering,
marked only by the size of their bodies, and were no freer
in spirit than the adults they accompanied. So innocent they
all seemed, so full of life and wistfulness, and obviously
bonded to each other by friendship more profound than
Drizzt had ever known in Menzoberranzan. So unlike the
stories Hatch'net had spun of them, tales of vile, hating
wretches.
Drizzt sensed more than saw that his group was on the
move, fanning out to gain a greater advantage. Still he did
not take his eyes from the spectacle before him. Dinin
tapped him on the shoulder and pointed to the small crossbow
that hung from his belt, then slipped off into position in
the brush off to the side.
Drizzt wanted to stop his brother and the others, wanted
to make them wait and observe the surface elves that they
were so quick to name enemies. Drizzt found his feet rooted
to the earth and his tongue weighted heavily in the sudden
dryness that had come into his mouth. He looked to Dinin
and could only hope that his brother mistakenly thought his
labored breaths the exultations of battle-lust. .
Then Drizzt's keen ears heard the soft thrum of a dozen
tiny bowstrings. The elven song carried on a moment
longer, until several of the group dropped to the earth.
"No!" Drizzt screamed in protest, the words torn from his
body by a profound rage even he did not understand. The
denial sounded like just another war cry to the drow raiders,
and before the surface elves could even begin to react,
Dinin and the others were upon them.
Drizzt, too, leaped into the glade's lighted ring, his weapons
in hand, though he had given no thought to his next
move. He wanted only to stop the battle, to put an end to the
scene unfolding before him.
Quite at ease in their woodland home, the surface elves
weren't even armed. The drow warriors sliced through
their ranks mercilessly, cutting them down and hacking at
their bodies long after the light of life had flown from their
eyes.
One terrified female, dodging this way and that, came before
Drizzt. He dipped the tips of his weapons to the earth,
searching for some way to give a measure of comfort.
The female then jerked straight as a sword dove into her
back, its tip thrusting right through her slender form.
Drizzt watched, mesmerized and horrified, as the drow
warrior behind her grasped the weapon hilt in both hands
and twisted it savagely. The female elf looked straight at
Drizzt in the last fleeting seconds of her life, her eyes crying
for mercy. Her voice was no more than the sickening gurgle
of blood.
His face the exultation of ecstacy, the drow warrior tore
his sword free and sliced it across, taking the head from the
elven female's shoulders.
"Vengeance!" he cried at Drizzt, his face contorted in furious
glee, his eyes burning with a light that shone demonic to
the stunned Drizzt. The warrior hacked at the lifeless body
one more time, then spun away in search of another kill.
Only a moment later, another elf, this one a young girl,
broke free of the massacre and rushed in Drizzt's direction,
screaming a single word over and over. Her cry was in the
tongue of the surface elves, a dialect foreign to Drizzt, but
when he looked upon her fair face, streaked with tears, he
understood what she was saying. Her eyes were on the mutilated
corpse at his feet; her anguish outweighed even the
terror of her own impending doom. She could only be crying,
"Mother!"
Rage, horror, anguish, and a dozen other emotions racked
Drizzt at that horrible moment. He wanted to escape his
feelings, to lose himself in the blind frenzy of his kin and accept
the ugly reality. How easy it would have been to throw
away the conscience that pained him so.
The elven child rushed up before Drizzt but hardly saw
him, her gaze locked upon her dead mother, the back of the
child's neck open to a single, clean blow. Drizzt raised his
scimitar, unable to distinguish between mercy and murder.
"Yes, my brother!" Dinin cried out to him, a call that cut
through his comrades' screams and whoops and echoed in
Drizzt's ears like an accusation. Drizzt looked up to see
Dinin, covered from head to foot in blood and standing
amid a hacked cluster of dead elves.
"Today you know the glory it is to be a drow!" Dinin cried,
and he punched a victorious fist into the air. "today we appease
the Spider Queen!"
Drizzt responded in kind, then snarled and reared back
for a killing blow.
He almost did it. In his unfocused outrage, Drizzt Do'Urden
almost became as his kin. He almost stole the life from
that beautiful child's sparkling eyes.
At the last moment, she looked up at him, her eyes shining
as a dark mirror into Drizzt's blackening heart. In that reflection,
that reverse image of the rage that guided his hand,
Drizzt Do'Urden found himself.
He brought the scimitar down in a mighty sweep, watching
Dinin out of the corner of his eye as it whisked harmlessly
past the child- In the same motion, Drizzt followed
with his other hand, catching the girl by the front of her tunic
and pulling her face-down to the ground.
She screamed, unharmed but terrified, and Drizzt saw
Dinin thrust his fist into the air again and spin away.
Drizzt had to work quickly; the battle was almost at its
gruesome end. He sliced his scimitars expertly above the
huddled child's back, cutting her clothing but not so much
as scratching her tender skin. Then he used the blood of the
headless corpse to mask the trick, taking grim satisfaction
that the elven mother would be pleased to know that, in
dying, she had saved the life of her daughter.
"Stay down” he whispered in the child's ear. Drizzt knew
that she could not understand his language, but he tried to
keep his tone comforting enough for her to guess at the deception.
He could only hope he had done an adequate job a
moment later, when Dinin and several others came over to
him.
"Well done!" Dinin said exuberantly, trembling with sheer
excitement. " A score of the orc-bait dead and not a one of us
even injured! The matrons of Menzoberranzan will be
pleased indeed, though we'll get no plunder from this pitiful
lot!" He looked down at the pile at Drizzt's feet, then clapped
his brother on the shoulder.
Did they think they could get away?" Dinin roared.
Drizzt fought hard to sublimate his disgust, but Dinin was
so entranced by the bloodbath that he wouldn't have noticed
anyway.
"Not with you here!" Dinin continued. "Two kills for
Drizzt! "
"One kill!" protested another, stepping beside Dinin.
Drizzt set his hands firmly on the hilts of his weapons and
gathered up his courage. If this approaching drow had
guessed the deception, Drizzt would fight to save the elven
child. He would kill his companions, even his brother, to
save the little girl with the sparkling eyes-until he himself
was slain. At least then Drizzt would not have to witness
their slaughter of the child.
Luckily, the problem never came up. "Drizzt got the
child” the drow said to Dinin, "but I got the elder female. I
put my sword right through her back before your brother
ever brought his scimitars to bear!"
It came as a reflex, an unconscious strike against the evil
all about him. Drizzt didn't even realize the act as it happened,
but a moment later, he saw the boasting drow lying
on his back, clutching at his face and groaning in agony.
Only then did Drizzt notice the burning pain in his hand,
and he looked down to see his knuckles, and the scimitar
hilt they clutched, spattered with blood.
"What are you about?" Dinin demanded.
Thinking quickly, Drizzt did not even reply to his brother.
He looked past Dinin, to the squirming form on the ground,
and transferred all the rage in his heart into a curse that the
others would accept and respect. "If ever you steal a kill
from me again” he spat, sincerity dripping from his false
words, "I will replace the head lost from its shoulders with
your own!"
Drizzt knew that the elven child at his feet, though doing
her best, had begun a slight shudder of sobbing, and he decided
not to press his luck. "Come, then” he growled. "Let us
leave this place. The stench of the surface world fills my
mouth with bile!"
He stormed away, and the others, laughing, picked up
their dazed comrade and followed.
"Finally” Dinin whispered as he watched his brother's
tense strides. "Finally you have learned what it is to be a
drow warrior!"
Dinin, in his blindness, would never understand the irony
of his words.
"We have one more duty before we return home” the
cleric explained to the group when it reached the cave's entrance.
She alone knew of the raid's second purpose. "The
matrons of Menzoberranzan have bid us to witness the ultimate
horror of the surface world, that we might warn our
kindred”
Our kindred? Drizzt mused, his thoughts black with sarcasm.
As far as he could see, the raiders had already witnessed
the horror of the surface world: themselves!
"There!" Dinin cried, pointing to the eastern horizon.
The tiniest shading of light limned the dark outline of distant
mountains. A surface dweller would not even have noticed
it, but the dark elves saw it clearly, and all of them,
even Drizzt, recoiled instinctively.
"It is beautiful” Drizzt dared to remark after taking a moment
to consider the spectacle.
Dinin's glare came at him icy cold, but no colder than the
look the cleric cast Drizzt's way. "Remove your cloaks and
equipment, even your armor” she instructed .the group.
"Quickly. Place them within the shadows of the cave so that
they will not be affected by the light”
When the task was completed, the cleric led them out into
the growing light. "Watch” was her grim command.
The eastern sky assumed a hue of purplish pink, then
pink altogether, its brightening causing the dark elves to
squint uncomfortably. Drizzt wanted to deny the event, to
put it into the same pile of anger that denied the master of
Lore's words concerning the surface elves.
Then it happened; the top rim of the sun crested the eastern
horizon. The surface world awakened to its warmth, its
life-giving energy. Those same rays assaulted the drow
elves' eyes with the fury of fire, tearing into orbs unaccustomed
to such sights.
"Watch!" the cleric cried at them. "Witness the depth of
the horror!"
One by one, the raiders cried out in pain and fell into the
cave's darkness, until Drizzt stood alone beside the cleric in
the growing daylight. Truly, the light assaulted Drizzt as
keenly as it had his kin, but he basked in it, accepting it as
his purgatory, exposing him for all to view while its stinging
fires cleansed his soul.
"Come” the cleric said to him at length, not understanding
his actions. "We have borne witness. We may now return to
our homeland”
"Homeland?" Drizzt replied, subdued.
"Menzoberranzan!" the cleric cried, thinking the male
confused beyond reason. "Come, before the inferno burns
the skin from your bones. Let our surface cousins suffer the
flames, a fitting punishment for their evil hearts!"
Drizzt chuckled hopelessly. A fitting punishment? He
wished that he could pluck a thousand such suns from the
sky and set them in every chapel in Menzoberranzan, to
shine eternally.
Then Drizzt could take the light no more. He scrambled
dizzily back into the cave and donned his outfit. The cleric
had the orb in hand, and Drizzt again was the first through
the tiny crack. When all the group rejoined in the tunnel beyond,
Drizzt took his position at the point and led them back
into the descending path's deepening gloom-back down
into the darkness of their existence.
Chapter 21
May It Please The Goddess
"Did you please the goddess?" Matron Malice asked, her
question as much a threat as an inquiry. At her side, the
other females of House Do'Urden, Briza, Vierna, and Maya,
looked on impassively, hiding their jealousy.
"Not a single drow was slain” Dinin replied, his voice thick
with the sweetness of drow evil. "We cut them and slashed
them!" He drooled as his recounting of the elven slaughter
brought back the lust of the moment. "Bit them and ripped
them!"
"What of you?" the matron mother interrupted, more
concerned with the consequences to her own family's
standing than with the raid's general success.
"Five” Dinin answered proudly. "I killed five, all of them
females!"
The matron's smile thrilled Dinin. Then Malice scowled as
she turned her gaze on Drizzt. "And him?" she inquired, not
expecting to be pleased with the answer. Malice did not doubt
her youngest son's prowess with weapons, but she had come
to suspect that Drizzt had too much of Zaknafein's emotional
makeup to ever be an attribute in such situations.
Dinin's smile confused her. He walked over to Drizzt and
draped an arm comfortably across his brother's shoulders.
"Drizzt got only one kill” Dinin began, "but it was a female
child”
"Only one?" Malice growled.
From the shadows off to the side, Zaknafein listened in
dismay. He wanted to shut out the elderboy Do'Urden's
damning words, but they held Zak in their grip. Of all the
evils Zak had ever encountered in Menzoberranzan, this
surely had to be the most disappointing. Drizzt had killed a
child.
"But the way he did it!" Dinin exclaimed. "He hacked her
apart; sent all of Lloth's fury slicing into her twitching body!
The Spider Queen must have treasured that kill above all
the others”
"Only one” Matron Malice said again, her scowl hardly
softening.
"He would have had two” Dinin continued. "Shar Nadal of
House Maevret stole one from his blade-another female”
"Then Lloth will look with favor on House Maevret” Briza
reasoned.
"No” Dinin replied. "Drizzt punished Shar Nadal for his
actions. The son of House Maevret would not respond to the
challenge”
The memory stuck in Drizzt's thoughts. He wished that
Shar Nadal had come back at him, so he could have vented
his rage more fully. Even that wish sent pangs of guilt coursing
through Drizzt.
"Well done, my children” Malice beamed, now satisfied
that both of them had acted properly in the raid. "The Spider
Queen will look upon House Do'Urden with favor for
this event. She will guide us to victory over this unknown
house that seeks to destroy us”
Zaknafein left the audience hall with his eyes down and
one hand nervously rubbing his sword's hilt. Zak remembered
the time he had deceived Drizzt with the light bomb,
when he had Drizzt defenseless and beaten. He could have
spared the young innocent from his horrid fate. He could
have killed Drizzt then and there, mercifully, and released
him from the inevitable circumstances of life in Menzoberranzan.
Zak paused in the long corridor and turned back to watch
the chamber. Drizzt and Dinin came out then, Drizzt casting
Zak a single, accusatory look and pointedly turning away
down a side passage.
The gaze cut through the weapon master. "So it has come
to this” Zak murmured to himself. "The youngest warrior
of House Do'Urden, so full of the hate that embodies our
race, has learned to despise me for what I am”
Zak thought again of that moment in the training gym,
that fateful second when Drizzt's life teetered on the edge
of a poised sword. It indeed would have been a merciful act
to kill Drizzt at that time.
With the sting of the young drow warrior's gaze still cutting
so keenly into his heart, Zak couldn't decide whether
the deed would have been more merciful to Drizzt or to
himself.
"Leave us” Matron SiNafay commanded as she swept into
the small room lighted by a candle's glow. Alton gawked at
the request; it was, after all, his personal room! Alton prudently
reminded himself that SiNafay was the matron
mother of the family, the absolute ruler of House Hun'ett.
With a few awkward bows and apologies for his hesitation,
he backed out of the room.
Masoj watched his mother cautiously as she waited for Alton
to move away. From SiNafay's agitated tone, Masoj understood
the significance of her visit. Had he done
something to anger his mother? Or, more likely, had Alton?
When SiNafay spun back on him, her face twisted in evil
glee, Masoj realized that her agitation was really excitement.
"House Do'Urden has erred!" she snarled. "It has lost the
Spider Queen's favor!"
"How?" Masoj replied. He knew that Dinin and Drizzt had
returned from a successful raid, an assault that all of the
city was talking about in tones of high praise.
"I do not know the details” Matron SiNafay replied, finding
a measure of calmness in her voice. "One of them, perhaps
one of the sons, did something to displease Lloth. This
was told to me by a handmaiden of the Spider Queen. It
must be true!"
"Matron Malice will work quickly to correct the situation”
Masoj reasoned. "How long do we have?"
"Lloth's displeasure will not be revealed to Matron Malice”
SiNafay replied. "Not soon. The Spider Queen knows
all. She knows that we plan to attack House Do'Urden, and
only an unfortunate accident will inform Matron Malice of
her desperate situation before her house is crushed!
"We must move quickly” Matron SiNafay went on. "Within
ten cycles of Narbondei, the first strike must fall! The full
battle will begin soon after, before House Do'Urden can link
its loss to our wrongdoing”
"What is to be their sudden loss?" Masoj prompted, thinking,
hoping, he had already guessed the answer.
His mother's words were like sweet music to his ears.
"Drizzt Do'Urden” she purred, "the favored son. Kill him
Masoj rested back and clasped his slender fingers behind
his head, considering the command.
"You will not fail me” SiNafay warned.
"I will not” Masoj assured her. "Drizzt, though young, is already
a powerful foe. His brother, a former master of
Melee-Magthere, is never far from his side” He looked up at
his matron mother, his eyes gleaming. "May I kill the
brother, too?"
"Be cautious, my son” SiNafay replied. "Drizzt Do'Urden is
your target. Concentrate your efforts toward his death.
" As you command” Masoj replied, bowing low.
SiNafay liked the way her young son heeded to her desires
without question. She started out of the room, confident
in Masoj's ability to perform the task.
"If Dinin Do'Urden somehow gets in the way” she said,
turning back to throw Masoj a gift for his obedience, "you
may kill him, too”
Masoj's expression revealed too much eagerness for the
second task.
"You will not fail me!" SiNafay said again, this time in an
open threat that stole some of the wind out of Masoj's filling
sails. "Drizzt Do'Urden must die within ten days!"
Masoj forced any distracting thoughts of Dinin out of his
mind. "Drizzt must die” he whispered over and over, long
after his mother had gone. He already knew how he wanted
to do it. He only had to hope that the opportunity would
come soon.
The awful memory of the surface raid followed Drizzt,
haunted him, as he wandered the halls of Daermon
N'a'shezbaernon. He had rushed from the audience chamber
as soon as Matron Malice had dismissed him, and had
slipped away from his brother at the first opportunity,
wanting only to be alone.
The images remained: the broken sparkle in the young elven
girl's eyes as she knelt over her murdered mother's
corpse; the elven woman's horrified expression, twisting in
agony as ghar Nadal ripped the life from her body. The surface
elves were there in Drizzt's thoughts; he could not dis.
miss them. They walked beside Drizzt as he wandered, as
real as they had been when Drizzt's raiding group had de.
scended upon their joyful song.
Drizzt wondered if he would ever be alone again.
Eyes down, consumed by his empty sense of loss, Drizzt c
did not mark the path before him. He jumped back, startled,
when he turned a corner and bumped into somebody.
He stood facing Zaknafein.
"You are home” the weapon master said absently, his
blank face revealing none of the tumultuous emotions swirling
through his mind.
Drizzt wondered if he could properly hide his own grimace.
"For a day” he replied, equally nonchalant, though his
rage with Zaknafein was no less intense. Now that Drizzt
had witnessed the wrath of drow elves firsthand, Zak's reputed
deeds rang out to Drizzt as even more evil. "My patrol
group goes back out at Narbondel's first light.
"So soon?" asked Zak, genuinely surprised.
"We are summoned.
Drizzt replied, starting past. Zak
caught him by the arm.
"General patrol?" he asked.
"Focused” Drizzt replied." Activity in the eastern tunnels”
"So the heroes are summoned” chuckled Zak.
Drizzt did not immediately respond. Was there sarcasm in
Zak's voice? Jealousy, perhaps, that Drizzt and Dinin were
allowed to go out to fight, while Zak had to remain within
the House Do'Urden's confines to fulfill his role as the family's
fighting instructor? Was Zak's hunger for blood so great
that he could not accept the duties thrust upon them all?
Zak had trained Drizzt and Dinin, had he not? And hundreds
of others; he'd transformed them into living weapons,
into murderers.
"How long will you be out?" Zak pressed, more interested
in Drizzt's whereabouts.
Drizzt shrugged. "A week at the longest”
"And then?"
"Home”
"That is good” said Zak. "I will be pleased to see you back
within the walls of House Do'Orden” Drizzt didn't believe a
word of it.
Zak then slapped him on the shoulder in a sudden, unexpected
movement designed to test Drizzt's reflexes. More
surprised than threatened, Drizzt accepted the pat without
response, not sure of his uncle's intent.
"The gym, perhaps?" asked Zak. "You and I, as it once
was.
Impossible! Drizzt wanted to shout. Never again would it
be as it once was. Drizzt held those thoughts to himself and
nodded his assent. "I would enjoy that” he replied, secretly
wondering how much satisfaction he would gain by cutting
Zaknafein down. Drizzt knew the truth of his people now,
and knew that he was powerless to change anything. Maybe
he could make a change in his private life, though. Maybe by
destroying Zaknafein, his greatest disappointment, Drizzt
could remove himself from the wrongness around him.
"As would I, Zak said, the friendliness of his tone hiding
his private thoughts-thoughts identical to Drizzt's.
"In a week, then” Drizzt said, and he pulled away, unable
to continue the encounter with the drow who once had
been his dearest friend, and who, Drizzt had come to learn,
was truly as devious and evil as the rest of his kin.
"Please, my matron” Alton whimpered, "it is my right. I
beg of you!"
"Rest easy, foolish DeVir” SiNafay replied, and there was
pity in her voice, an emotion seldom felt and almost never
revealed.
"I have waited-"
"The time is almost upon you” SiNafay countered, her
tone growing more threatening. "You have tried for this one
before?'
Alton's grotesque gawk brought a smile to SiNafay's face.
Yes, she said, "I know of your bungled attempt on Drizzt
Do'Urden's life. If Masoj had not arrived, the young warrior
would probably have slain you?'
"I would have destroyed him!" Alton growled.
SiNafay did not argue the point. "Perhaps you would have
won” she said, "only to be exposed as a murderous imposter,
with the wrath of all of Menzoberranzan hanging over
your head!"
"I did not care?'
"You would have cared, I promise you!" Matron SiNafay
sneered. "You would have forfeited your chance to claim a
greater revenge. Trust in me, Alton DeVir. Your-ourvictory
is at hand?'
"Masoj will kill Drizzt, and maybe Dinin” Alton grumbled.
"There are other Do'Urdens awaiting the fell hand of Alton
DeVir” Matron SiNafay promised. "High priestesses?'
Alton could not dismiss the disappointment he felt at not
being allowed to go after Drizzt. He badly wanted to kill that
one. Drizzt had brought him embarrassment that day in his
chambers at Sorcere; the young draw should have died
quickly and quietly. Alton wanted to make up for that mistake.
Alton also could not ignore the promise that Matron SiNafay
had just made to him. The thought of killing one or more
of the high priestesses of House Do'Urden did not displease
him at all.
The pillowy softness of the plush bed, so different from
the rest of the hard stone world of Menzoberranzan, of.
fered Drizzt no relief from the pain. Another ghost had
reared up to overwhelm even the images of carnage on the
surface: the specter of Zaknafein.
Dinin and Vierna had told Drizzt the truth of the weapon
master, of Zak's role in the fall of House DeVir, and of how
Zak so enjoyed slaughtering other drow-other drow who
had done nothing to wrong him or deserve his wrath.
So Zaknafein, too, took part in this evil game of drow life,
the endless quest to please the Spider Queer.
" As I so pleased her on the surface?" Drizzt couldn't help
but mumble, the sarcasm of the spoken words bringing him
some small measure of comfort.
The comfort Drizzt felt in saving the life of the elven child
seemed such a minor act against the overwhelming wrongs
his raiding group had exacted on her people. Matron Malice,
his mother, had so enjoyed hearing the bloody recount.
ing. Drizzt remembered the elven child's horror at the sight
of her dead mother. Would he, or any dark elf, be so devastated
if they looked upon such a sight. Unlikely, he thought.
Drizzt hardly shared a loving bond with Malice, and most
draw would be too engaged in measuring the consequences
of their mother's death to their own station to feel any sense
of loss.
Would Malice have cared if either Drizzt or Dinin had
fallen in the raid? Again Drizzt knew the answer. All that
Malice cared about was how the raid affected her own base
of power. She had reveled in the notion that her children
had pleased her evil goddess.
What favor would Lloth show to House Do'Urden if she
knew the truth of Drizzt's actions? Drizzt had no way to
measure how much, if any, interest the Spider Queen had
taken in the raid. Lloth remained a mystery to him, one he
had no desire to explore. Would she be enraged if she knew
the truth of the raid? Or if she knew the truth of Drizzt's
thoughts at this moment?
Drizzt shuddered to think of the punishments he might
be bringing upon himself, but he had already firmly decided
upon his course of action, whatever the consequences.
He would return to House Do'Urden in a week. He
would go then to the practice gym for a reunion with his old
teacher.
He would kill Zaknafein in a week.
Caught up in the emotions of a dangerous and heartfelt
decision, Zaknafein hardly heard the biting scrape as he ran
the whetstone along his sword's gleaming edge.
The weapon had to be perfect, with no jags or burrs. This
deed had to be executed without malice or anger.
A clean blow, and Zak would rid himself of the demons of
his own failures, hide himself once again within the sanctuary
of his private chambers, his secret world. A clean blow,
and he would do what he should have done a decade before.
"If only I had found the strength then; he lamented. "How
much grief might I have spared Drizzt? How much pain did
his days at the Academy bring to him, that he is so very
changed?" The words rang hollow in the empty room. They
were just words, useless now, for Zak had already decided
that Drizzt was out of reason's reach. Drizzt was a drow
warrior, with all of the wicked connotations carried in such
a title.
The choice was gone to Zaknafein if he wished to hold any
pretense of value to his wretched existence. This time, he
could not stay his sword. He had to kill Drizzt.
Chapter 22
Gnomes,Wicked Gnomes
Among the twists and turns of the tunnel mazes of the
Underdark, slipping about their silent way, went the
svirfnebli, the deep gnomes. Neither kind nor evil, and so
out of place in this world of pervading wickedness, the deep
gnomes survived and thrived. Haughty fighters, skilled in
crafting weapons and armor, and more in tune to the songs
of the stone than even the evil gray dwarves, the svirfnebli
continued their business of plucking gems and precious
metals in spite of the perils awaiting them at every turn.
When the news came back to Blingdenstone, the cluster
of tunnels and caverns that composed the deep gnomes'
city, that a rich vein of gemstones had been discovered
twenty miles to the east-as the rockworm, the thoqqua,
burrowed-Burrow-warden Belwar Dissengulp had to
climb over a dozen others of his rank to be awarded the
privilege of leading the mining expedition. Belwar and all of
the others knew well that forty miles east-as the rockworm
burrowed-would put the expedition dangerously
close to Menzoberranzan, and that even getting there
would mean a week of hiking, probably through the territories
of a hundred other enemies. Fear was no measure
against the love svirfnebli had for gems, though, and every
day in the Underdark was a risk.
When Belwar and his forty miners arrived in the small cavern
described by the advance scouts and inscribed with
the gnomes' mark of treasure, they found that the claims
had not been exaggerated. The burrow-warden took care
not to get overly excited, though. He knew that twenty
thousand drow elves, the svirfnebli's most hated and feared
enemy, lived fewer than five miles away.
Escape tunnels became the first order of business, winding
constructions high enough for a three-foot gnome but
not for a taller pursuer. All along the course of these the
gnomes placed breaker walls, designed to deflect a lightning
bolt or offer some protection from the expanding
flames of a fireball.
Then, when the true mining at last began, Belwar kept
fully a third of his crew on guard at all times and walked the
area of the work with one hand always clutching the magical
emerald, the summoning stone, he kept on a chain
around his neck.
"Three full patrol groups” Drizzt remarked to Dinin
when they arrived at the open "field" on the eastern side of
Menzoberranzan. Few stalagmites lined this region of the
city, but it did not seem so open now, with dozens of anxious
drow milling about.
"Gnomes are not to be taken lightly” Dinin replied. "They
are wicked and powerful-"
" As wicked as surface elves?" Drizzt had to interrupt, covering
his sarcasm with false exuberance.
" Almost” his brother warned grimly, missing the connotations
of Drizzt's question. Dinin pointed off to the side,
where a contingent of female drow was coming in to join
the group. "Clerics” he said, "and one of them a high priestess.
The rumors of activity must have been confirmed”
A shudder coursed through Drizzt, a tingle of prebattle
excitement. That excitement was altered and lessened,
though, by fear, not of physical harm, or even of the
gnomes. Drizzt feared that this encounter might be a repeat
of the surface tragedy.
He shook the black thoughts away and reminded himself
that this time, unlike the surface expedition, his home was
being invaded. The gnomes had crossed the boundaries of
the drow realm. If they were as evil as Dinin and all the others
claimed, Menzoberranzan had no choice but to respond
with force. If.
Drizzt's patrol, the most celebrated group among the
males, was selected to lead, and Drizzt, as always, took the
point position. Still unsure, he wasn't thrilled with the assignment,
and as they started out, Drizzt even contemplated
leading the group astray. Or perhaps, Drizzt thought,
he could contact the gnomes privately before the others arrived
and warn them to flee.
Drizzt realized the absurdity of the notion. He couldn't
stop the wheels of Menzoberranzan from turning along
their designated course, and he couldn't do anything to hinder
the two score drow warriors, excited and impatient, at
his back. Again he was trapped and on the edge of despair.
Masoj Hun'ett appeared then and made everything better.
"Guenhwyvar!" the young wizard called, and the great
panther came bounding. Masoj left the cat beside Drizzt
and headed back toward his place in the line.
Guenhwyvar could no more hide its elation at seeing
Drizzt than Drizzt could contain his own smile. With the interruption
of the surface raid, and then his time back home,
he hadn't seen Guenhwyvar in mere than a month.
Guenhwyvar thumped against Drizzt's side as it passed,
nearly knocking the slender drow from his feet. Drizzt responded
with a heavy pat, vigorously rubbing a hand over
the cat's ear.
They both turned back together, suddenly conscious of
the unhappy glare boring into them. There stood Masoj,
arms crossed over his chest and a visible scowl heating up
his face.
"I shan't use the cat to kill Drizzt” the young wizard muttered
to himself. "I want the pleasure for myself
Drizzt wondered if jealousy prompted that scowl. Jealousy
of Drizzt and the cat, or of everything in general? Masoj
had been left behind when Drizzt had gone to the
surface. Masoj had been no more than a spectator when the
victorious raiding party returned in glory. Drizzt backed
away from Guenhwyvar, sensitive to the wizard's pain.
As soon as Masoj had moved away to take his position farther
down the line, Drizzt dropped to one knee and threw a
headlock on Guenhwyvar.
Drizzt found himself even gladder for Guenhwyvar's
companionship when they passed beyond the familiar tunnels
of the normal patrol routes. It was a saying in Menzoberranzan
that "no one is as alone as the point of a drow
patrol” and Drizzt had come to understand this keenly in
the last few months. He stopped at the far end of a wide way
and held perfectly still, focusing his ears and eyes to the
trails behind him. He knew that more than forty drow were
approaching his position, fully arrayed for battle and agitated.
Still, not a sound could Drizzt detect, and not a mo.
tion was discernable in the eerie shadows of cool stone.
Drizzt looked down at Guenhwyvar, waiting patiently by his
side, and started off again.
He could sense the hot presence of the war party at his
back. That intangible sensation was the only thing that disproved
Drizzt's feelings that he and Guenhwyvar were
quite alone.
Near the end of that day, Drizzt heard the first signs of
trouble. As he neared an intersection in the tunnel, cautiously
pressed close to one wall, he felt a subtle vibration in
the stone. It came again a second later, and then again, and
Drizzt recognized it as the rhythmic tapping of a pick or
hammer.
He took a magically heated sheet, a small square that fit
into the palm of his hand, out of his pack. One side of the
item was shielded in heavy leather, but the other shone
brightly to eyes seeing in the infrared spectrum. Drizzt
flashed it down the tunnel behind him, and a few seconds
later, Dinin came up to his side.
"Hammer” Drizzt signaled in the silent code, pointing to
the wall. Dinin pressed against the stone and nodded in confirmation.
"Fifty yards?" Dinin's hand motions asked.,
"Less than one hundred” Drizzt confirmed.
With his own prepared sheet, Dinin flashed the get-ready
signal into the gloom behind him, then moved with Drizzt
and Guenhwyvar around the intersection toward the tapping.
Only a moment later, Drizzt looked upon svirfnebli
gnomes for the very first time. Gnome guards stood barely
twenty feet away, chest-high to a drow and hairless, with
skin strangely akin to the stone in both texture and heat radiations.
The gnomes' eyes glowed brightly in the telltale
red of infravision. One glance at those eyes reminded Drizzt
and Dinin that deep gnomes were as much at home in the
darkness as were the drow, and they both prudently
ducked behind a rocky outcropping in the tunnel.
Dinin promptly signaled to the next drow in line, and so
on, until the entire party was alerted. Then he crouched
low and peeked out around the bottom of the outcropping.
The tunnel continued another thirty feet beyond the gnome
guards and around a slight bend, ending in some larger
chamber. Dinin couldn't clearly see this area, but the glow
of it, from the heat of the work and a cluster of bodies,
spilled out into the corridor.
Again Dinin signaled back to his hidden comrades, and
then he turned to Drizzt. "Stay here with the cat” he instructed,
and he darted back down around the intersection
to formulate plans with the other leaders.
Masoj a few places back in the line, noted Dinin's movement
and wondered if the opportunity to deal with Drizzt
had suddenly come upon him. If the patrol was discovered
with Drizzt all alone up in front, was there some way Masoj
could secretly blast the young Do'Urden? The opportunity,
if ever it was truly there, passed quickly, though, as other
drow soldiers came up beside the plotting wizard. Dinin
soon returned from the back of the line and headed back to
join his brother.
"The chamber has many exits” Dinin signaled to Drizzt
when they were together. "The other patrols are moving
into position around the gnomes"
"Might we parley with the gnomes?" Drizzt's hands asked
in reply, almost subconsciously. He recognized the expression
spreading across Dinin's face, but knew that he had already
plunged in. "Send them away without conflict?"
Dinin grabbed Drizzt by the front of his piwafwi and
pulled him close, too close, to that terrible scowl. "I will forget
that you asked that question” he whispered, and he
dropped Drizzt back to the stone, considering the issue
closed.
"You start the fight” Dinin signaled. "When you see the
sign from behind, darken the corridor and rush past the
guards. Get to the gnome leader; he is the key to their
strength with the stone”
Drizzt didn't fully understand what gnomish power his
brother hinted at, but the instructions seemed simple
enough, if somewhat suicidal.
"Take the cat if the cat will go” Dinin continued. "The entire
patrol will be by your side in moments. The remaining
groups will corne in from the other passages”
Guenhwyvar nuzzled up to Drizzt, more than ready to
follow him into battle. Drizzt took comfort in that when
Dinin departed, leaving him alone again at the front. Only a
few seconds later carne the command to attack. Drizzt
shook his head in disbelief when he saw the signal; how fast
drow warriors found their positions!
He peeked around at the gnomish guards, still holding
their silent vigil, completely unaware. Drizzt drew his
blades and patted Guenhwyvar for luck, then called upon
the innate magic of his race and dropped a globe of darkness
in the corridor.
Squeals of alarm sounded throughout the tunnels, and
Drizzt charged in, diving right into the darkness between
the unseen guards and rolling back to his feet on the other
side of his spell, only two running strides from the small
chamber. He saw a dozen gnomes scrambling about, trying
to prepare their defenses. Few of them paid Drizzt any attention,
though, as the sounds of battle erupted from various
side corridors.
One gnome chopped a heavy pick at Drizzt's shoulder.
Drizzt got a blade up to block the blow but was amazed at
the strength in the diminutive gnome's arms. Still, Drizzt
could then have killed his attacker with the other scimitar.
Too many doubts, and too many memories, though,
haunted his actions. He brought a leg up into the gnome's
belly, sending the little creature sprawling.
Belwar Dissengulp, next in line for Drizzt, noted how easily
the young drow had dispatched one of his finest fighters
and knew that the time had already come to use his most
powerful magic. He pulled the emerald summoning stone
from his neck and threw it to the ground at Drizzt's feet.
Drizzt jumped back, sensing the emanations of magic. Behind
him, Drizzt heard the approach of his companions,
overpowering the shocked gnome guards and rushing to
join him in the chamber. Then Drizzt's attentions went
squarely to the heat patterns of the stone floor in front of
him. The grayish lines wavered and swam, as if the stone
was somehow coming alive.
The other drow fighters roared in past Drizzt, bearing
down on the gnome leader and his charges. Drizzt didn't
follow, guessing that the event unfolding at his feet was
more critical than the general battle now echoing throughout
the complex.
Fifteen feet tall and seven wide, an angry, towering humanoid
monster of living stone rose before Drizzt.
"Elemental" came a scream to the side. Drizzt glanced
over to see Masoj, Guenhwyvar at his side, fumbling
through a spellbook, apparently in search of some
dweomer to battle this unexpected monster. To Drizzt's dismay,
the frightened wizard mumbled a couple of words and
vanished.
Drizzt set his feet under him, and took a measure of the
monster, ready to spring aside in an instant. He could sense
the thing's power, the raw strength of the earth embodied
in living arms and legs.
A lumbering arm swung out in a wide arc, whooshing
above Drizzt's ducking head and slamming into the cavern
wall, crushing rocks into dust.
"Do not let it hit me” Drizzt instructed himself in a whisper
that came out as a disbelieving gasp. As the elemental
recoiled its arm, Drizzt poked a scimitar at it, chipping away
a small chunk, barely a scratch. The elemental grimaced in
pain-apparently Drizzt could indeed hurt it with his enchanted
weapons.
Still standing in the same spot off to the side, the invisible
Masoj held his next spell in check, watching the spectacle
and waiting for the combatants to weaken each other. Perhaps
the elemental would destroy Drizzt altogether. Invisible
shoulders gave a resigned shrug. Masoj decided to let
the gnomish power do his dirty work for him.
The monster launched another blow, and another, and
Drizzt dove forward and scrambled through the thing's
stone pillar legs. The elemental reacted quickly and
stomped heavily with one foot, barely missing the agile
drow, and sending branching cracks in the floor for many
feet in either direction.
Drizzt was up in a flash, slicing and thrusting with both
his blades into the elemental's backside, then springing back
out of reach as the monster swung about, leading with another
ferocious blow.
The sounds of battle grew more distant. The gnomes had
taken flight-those that were still alive-but the drow war.
riors were in full pursuit, leaving Drizzt to face the elemental.
The monster stomped again, the thunder of its foot nearly
knocking Drizzt from his feet, and then it came in hard, falling
down at Drizzt, using the tonnage of its body as a
weapon. If Drizzt had been even slightly surprised, or if his
reflexes had not been honed to such perfection, he surely
would have been crushed flat. He managed to get to the side
of the monster's bulk, while taking only a glancing blow
from a swinging arm.
Dust rushed up from the terrific impact; cavern walls and
ceiling cracked and dropped flecks and stones to the floor.
As the elemental regained its feet, Drizzt backed away,
overwhelmed by such unconquerable strength.
He was all alone against it, or so Drizzt thought. A sudden
ball of hot fury enveloped the elemental's head, claws raking
deep scratches into its face.
"Guenhwyvar" Drizzt and Masoj shouted in unison,
Drizzt in elation that an ally had been found, and Masoj in
rage. The wizard did not want Drizzt to survive this battle,
and he dared not launch any magical attacks, at Drizzt or
the elemental, with his precious Guenhwyvar in the way.
"Do something, wizard!" Drizzt cried, recognizing the
shout and understanding now that Masoj was still around.
The elemental bellowed in pain, its cry sounding as the
rumble of huge boulders crashing down a rocky mountain.
Even as Drizzt moved back in to help his feline friend, the
monster spun, impossibly quick, and dove headfirst to the
floor.
"No!" Drizzt cried, realizing that Guenhwyvar would be
crushed. Then the cat and the elemental, instead of slamming
against the stone, sank down into it!
The purple flames of faerie fire outlined the figures of the
gnomes, showing the way for drow arrows and swords.
The gnomes countered with magic of their own, illusionary
tricks mostly. "Down here!" one drow soldier cried, only to
slam face first into the stone of a wall that had appeared as
the entrance to a corridor.
Even though the gnome magic managed to keep the dark
elves somewhat confused, Belwar Dissengulp grew frightened.
His elemental, his strongest magic and only hope, was
taking too long with the single drow warrior far back in the
main chamber. The burrow-warden wanted the monster by
his side when the main combat began. He ordered his forces
into tight defensive formations, hoping that they could hold
out.
Then the drow warriors, detained no more by gnomish
tricks, were upon them, and fury stole Belwar's fear. He
lashed out with his heavy pickaxe, smiling grimly as he felt
the mighty weapon bite into drow flesh.
All magic was aside now, all formations and carefully laid
battle plans dissolved into the wild frenzy of the brawl.
Nothing mattered, except to hit the enemy, to feel the pick
head or blade sinking into flesh. Above all others, deep
gnomes hated the drow, and in all the Underdark there was
nothing a dark elf enjoyed more than slicing a svirfnebli into
littler pieces.
Drizzt rushed to the spot, but only the unbroken section
of floor remained. "Masoj?" he gasped, looking for some an.
swers from the one schooled in such strange magic.
Before the wizard could answer, the floor erupted behind
Drizzt. He spun, weapons ready, to face the towering elemental.
Then Drizzt watched in helpless agony as the broken mist
that was the great panther, his dearest companion, rolled
off the elemental's shoulders and broke apart as it neared
the floor.
Drizzt ducked another blow, though his eyes never left
the dissipating dust-and-mist cloud. Was Guenhwyvar no
more? Was his only friend gone from him forever? A new
light grew in Drizzt lavender eyes, a primal rage that simmered
throughout his body. He looked back to the elemental,
unafraid.
"You are dead” he promised, and he walked in.
The elemental seemed confused, though of course it
could not understand Drizzt's words. It dropped a heavy
arm straight down to squash its foolish opponent. Drizzt did
not even raise his blades to parry, knowing that every ounce
of his strength could not possibly deflect such a blow. Just
as the falling arm was about to reach him, he dashed forward,
within its range.
The quickness of his move surprised the elemental, and
the ensuing flurry of swordplay took Masoj's breath away.
The wizard had never seen such grace in battle, such fluidity
of motion. Drizzt climbed up and down the elemental's
body, hacking and slashing, digging the points of his weapons
home and flicking off pieces of the monster's stone skin.
The elemental howled its avalanche howl and spun in circles,
trying to catch up to Drizzt and squash him once and
for all. Blind anger brought new levels of expertise to the
magnificent young swordsman, though, and the elemental
caught nothing but air or its own stony body under its
heavy slaps.
"Impossible” Masoj muttered when he found his breath.
Could the young Do'Urden actually defeat an elemental?
Masoj scanned the rest of the area. Several drow and many
gnomes lay dead or grievously wounded, but the main fighting
was moving even farther away as the gnomes found
their tiny escape tunnels and the drow, enraged beyond
good sense, followed them.
Guenhwyvar was gone. In this chamber, only Masoj, the
elemental, and Drizzt remained as witnesses. The invisible
wizard felt his mouth draw up in a smile. Now was the time
to strike.
Drizzt had the elemental lurching to one side, nearly
beaten, when the bolt roared in, a blast of lightning that
blinded the young drow and sent him flying into the chamber's
back wall. Drizzt watched the twitch of his hands, the
wild dance of his stark white hair before his unmoving eyes.
He felt nothing-no pain, no reviving draw of air into his
lungs-and heard nothing, as if his life force had been somehow
suspended.
The attack dispelled Masoj's dweomer of invisibility, and
he came back in view, laughing wickedly. The elemental,
down in a broken, crumbled mass, slowly slipped back into
the security of the stone floor.
"Are you dead?" the wizard asked Drizzt, the voice breaking
the hush of Drizzt's deafness in dramatic booms. Drizzt
could not answer, didn't really know the answer anyway.
"Too easy” he heard Masoj say, and he suspected that the
wizard was referring to him and not the elemental.
Then Drizzt felt a tingling in his fingers and bones and his
lungs heaved suddenly, grabbing a volume of air. He gasped
in rapid succession, then found control of his body and realized
that he would survive.
Masoj glanced around for returning witnesses and saw
none. "Good” he muttered as he watched Drizzt regain his
senses. The wizard was truly glad that Drizzt's death had
not been so very painless. He thought of another spell that
would make the moment more fun.
A hand-a gigantic stone hand-reached out of the floor
just then and grasped Masoj's leg, pulling his feet right into
the stone.
The wizard's face twisted in a silent scream.
Drizzt's enemy saved his life. Drizzt snatched up one of
the scimitars from the ground and hacked at the elemental's
arm. The weapon sliced in, and the monster, its head reappearing
between Drizzt and Masoj, howled in rage and pain
and pulled the trapped wizard deeper into the stone.
With both hands on the scimitar's hilt, Drizzt struck as
hard as he could, splitting the elemental's head right in half.
This time the rubble did not sink back into its earthen plane;
this time the elemental was destroyed.
"Get me out of here!" Masoj demanded. Drizzt looked at
him, hardly believing that Masoi was still alive, for he was
waist deep in solid stone.
"How?" Drizzt gasped. "You. . “ He couldn't even find the
words to express his amazement.
"Just get me out!" the wizard cried.
Drizzt fumbled about, not knowing where to begin.
"Elementals travel between planes” Masoj explained,
knowing that he had to calm Drizzt down if he ever wanted
to get out of the floor. Masoj knew, too, that the conversation
could go a long way in deflecting Drizzt's obvious suspicions
that the lightning bolt had been aimed at him. "The
ground an earth elemental traverses becomes a gate between
the Plane of Earth and our plane, the Material Plane.
The stone parted around me as the monster pulled me in,
but it is quite uncomfortable” He twitched in pain as the
stone tightened around one foot. "The gate is closing fast!"
"Then Guenhwyvar might be . . “ Drizzt started to reason.
He plucked the statuette right out of Masoj's front pocket
and carefully inspected it for any flaws in its perfect design.
"Give me that!" Masoj demanded, embarrassed and angry.
Reluctantly, Drizzt handed the figurine over. Masoj
glanced at it quickly and dropped it back into the pocket.
"Is Guenhwyvar unharmed?" Drizzt had to ask.
"It is not your concern” Masoj snapped back. The wizard,
too, was worried about the cat, but at this moment,
Guenhwyvar was the least of his troubles. "The gate is closing”
he said again. "Go get the clerics!"
Before Drizzt could start off, a slab of stone in the wall be.
hind him slid away, and the rock-hard fist of Belwar Dissengulp
slammed into the back of his head.
Chapter 23
A Single Clean Blow
"The gnomes took him” Masoj said to Dinin when the patrol
leader returned to the cavern. The wizard lifted his
arms over his head to give the high priestess and her assistants
a better view of his predicament.
"Where?" Dinin demanded. "Why did they let you live?"
Masoj shrugged. "A secret door” he explained, "somewhere
on the wall behind you. I suspect that they would
have taken me as well, except. . “ Masoj looked down at the
floor, still holding him tightly up to the waist. "The gnomes
would have killed me, but for your arrival”
"You are fortunate, wizard” the high priestess said to Masoj.
"I have memorized a spell this day that will release the
stone's hold on you” She whispered some instructions to
her assistants and they took out water skins and pouches of
clay and began tracing a ten foot square on the floor around
the trapped wizard. The high priestess moved over to the
wall of the chamber and prepared for her prayers.
"Some have escaped” Dinin said to her.
The high priestess understood. She whispered a quick detection
spell and studied the wall. "Right there” she said.
Dinin and another male rushed over to the spot and soon
found the almost imperceptible outline to the secret door.
As the high priestess began her incantation, one of her
cleric assistants threw the end of a rope to Masoj. "Hold on”
the assistant teased, "and hold your breath!"
"Wait -" Masoj began, but the stone floor all around him
transformed into mud and the wizard slipped under.
The clerics, laughing, pulled Masoj out a moment later.
"Nice spell” the wizard remarked, spitting mud.
"It has its purposes” replied the high priestess. "Especially
when we fight against the gnomes and their tricks with the
stone. I carried it as a safeguard against earth elementals”
She looked at a piece of rubble at her feet, unmistakably one
eye and the nose of such a creature. "I see that my spell was
not needed in that manner”
"I destroyed that one” Masoj lied.
"Indeed” said the high priestess, unconvinced. She could
tell by the cut of the rubble that a blade had made the
wound. She let the issue drop when the scrape of sliding
stone turned them all to the wall.
"A maze” moaned the fighter beside Dinin when he
peered into the tunnel. "How will we find them?"
Dinin thought for a moment, then spun on Masoj. "They
have my brother” he said, an idea coming to mind. "Where
is your cat?"
" About” Masoj stalled, guessing Dinin's plan and not really
wanting Drizzt rescued.
"Bring it to me” Dinin ordered. "The cat can smell Drizzt”
"I cannot. . . I mean” Masoj stuttered.
"Now, wizard!" Dinin commanded. "Unless you wish me
to tell the ruling council that some of the gnomes escaped
because you refused to help!"
Masoj tossed the figurine to the ground and called for
Guenhwyvar, not really knowing what would happen next.
Had the earth elemental really destroyed Guenhwyvar? The
mist appeared, in seconds transforming into the panther's
corporeal body.
"Well” Dinin prompted, indicating the tunnel.
"Go find Drizzt!" Masoj commanded the cat. Guenhwyvar
sniffed around the area for a moment, then bounded off
down the small tunnel, the drow patrol in silent pursuit.
"Where. . “ Drizzt started when he finally began the long
climb from the depths of unconsciousness. He understood
that he was sitting, and knew, too, that his hands were
bound in front of him.
A small but undeniably strong hand caught him by the
back of the hair and pulled his head back roughly.
"Quiet!" Belwar whispered harshly, and Drizzt was surprised
that the creature could speak his language. Belwar
let go of Drizzt and turned to join other svirfnebli.
From the chamber's low height and the gnomes' nervous
movements, Drizzt realized that this group had taken flight.
The gnomes began a quiet conversation in their own
tongue, which Drizzt could not begin to understand. One of
them asked the gnome who had ordered Drizzt to be quiet,
apparently the leader, a heated question. Another grunted
his accord and spoke some harsh words, turning on Drizzt
with a dangerous look in his eyes.
The leader slapped the other gnome hard on the back and
sent him off through one of the two low exits in the chamber,
then put the others into defensive positions. He walked
over to Drizzt. "You come with us to Blingdenstone” he said
in hesitant words.
"Then?" Drizzt asked.
Belwar shrugged. "The king'll decide. If you cause me no
trouble, I'll tell him to let you go”
Drizzt laughed cynically.
"Well, then” said Belwar, "if the king says to kill you, I'll
make sure it comes in a single clean blow”
Again Drizzt laughed. "Do you believe that I believe?" he
asked. "Torture me now and have your fun. That is your evil
way!"
Belwar started to slap him but held his hand in check.
"Svirfnebli don't torture!" he declared, louder than he
should have. "Drow elves torture!" He turned away but
spun back, reiterating his promise." A single clean blow”
Drizzt found that he believed the sincerity in the gnome's
voice, and he had to accept that promise as a measure of
mercy far greater than the gnome would have received if
Dinin's patrol had captured him. Belwar turned to walk
away, but Drizzt, intrigued, had to learn more of the curious
creature.
"How have you learned my language?" he asked.
"Gnomes are not stupid” Belwar retorted, unsure of what
Drizzt was leading to.
"Nor are drow” Drizzt replied earnestly, "but I have never
heard the language of the svirfnebli spoken in my city”
"There once was a drow in Blingdenstone” Belwar explained,
now nearly as curious about Drizzt as Drizzt was
about him.
"Slave” Drizzt reasoned.
"Guest!" Belwar snapped. "Svirfnebli keep no slaves!"
Again Drizzt found that he could not refute the sincerity
in Belwar's voice. "What is your name?" he asked.
The gnome laughed at him. “Do you think me stupid?"
Belwar asked. "You desire my name that you might use its
power in some dark magic against me!"
"No” Drizzt protested.
"I should kill you now for thinking me stupid!" Belwar
growled, ominously lifting his heavy pick. Drizzt shifted uncomfortably,
not knowing what the gnome would do next.
"My offer remains” Belwar said, lowering the pick. "No
trouble, and 1 tell the king to let you go” Belwar didn't believe
that would happen any more than did Drizzt, so the
svirfneblin, with a helpless shrug, offered Drizzt the next
best thing. "Or else, a single clean blow”
A commotion from one of the tunnels turned Belwar
away. "Belwar” called one of the other gnomes, rushing
back into the small chamber. The gnome leader turned a
wary eye on Drizzt to see if the drow had caught the mention
of his name.
Drizzt wisely kept his head turned away, pretending not
to listen. He had indeed heard the name of the gnome leader
who had shown him mercy. Belwar, the other svirfneblin
had said. Belwar, a name that Drizzt would never forget.
Fighting from down the passageway caught everyone's attention,
then, and several svirfnebli scrambled back into
the chamber. Drizzt knew from their excitement that the
drow patrol was close behind.
Belwar started barking out commands, mostly organizing
the retreat down the chamber's other tunnel. Drizzt won.
dered where he would fit into the gnome's thinking. Cer.
tainly Belwar couldn't hope to outrun the drow patrol
dragging along a prisoner.
Then the gnome leader suddenly stopped talking and
stopped moving. Too suddenly.
The drow clerics had led the way in with their insidious,
paralyzing spells. Belwar and another gnome were held fast
by the dweomer, and the rest of the gnomes, realizing this,
broke into a wild scramble for the rear exit.
The drow warriors, Guenhwyvar leading the way,
charged into the room. Any relief Drizzt might have felt at
seeing his feline friend unharmed was buried under the ensuing
slaughter. Dinin and his troops cut into the disorganized
gnomes with typical drow savagery.
In seconds-horrible seconds that seemed like hours to
Drizzt-only Belwar and the other gnome caught in the
clerical spell remained alive in the chamber. Several of the
svirfnebli had managed to flee down the back corridor, but
most of the drow patrol was off in pursuit.
Masoj came into the chamber last, looking thorougly
wretched in his mud-covered clothing. He remained at the
tunnel exit and did not even look Drizzt's way, except to
note that his panther was standing protectively beside the
secondboy of House Do'Urden.
"Again you have found your measure of luck, and more”
Dinin said to Drizzt as he cut his brother's bonds.
Looking around at the carnage in the chamber, Drizzt
wasn't so sure.
Dinin handed him back his scimitars, then turned to the
drow standing watch over the two paralyzed gnomes. "Finish
them” Dinin instructed.
A wide smile spread over the other drow's face, and he
pulled a jagged knife from his belt. He held it up in front of a
gnome's face, teasing the helpless creature. "Can they see
it?" he asked the high priestess.
"That is the fun of the spell” the high priestess replied.
"The svirfneblin understands what is about to happen. Even
now he is struggling to break out of the hold”
"Prisoners!" Drizzt blurted.
Dillin and the others turned to him, the draw with the
dagger wearing a scowl both angry and disappointed.
"For House Do'Urden?" Drizzt asked Dinin hopefully. "We
could benefit from-"
"Svirfnebli do not make good slaves” Dinin replied.
"No; agreed the high priestess, moving beside the daggerwielding
fighter. She nodded to the warrior and his smile returned
tenfold. He struck hard. Only Belwar remained.
The warrior waved his blood-stained dagger ominously
and moved in front of the gnome leader.
"Not that one!" Drizzt protested, unable to bear anymore.
"Let him live!" Drizzt wanted to say that Belwar could do
them no harm, and that killing the defenseless gnome
would be a cowardly and vile act. Drizzt knew that appealing
to his kin for mercy would be a waste of time.
Dinin's expression was more a look of anger than curiosity
this time.
"If you kill him, then no gnomes will remain to return to
their city and tell of our strength; Drizzt reasoned, grasping
at the one slim hope he could find. "We should send him
back to his people, send him back to tell them of their folly
in entering the domain of the drow!"
Dinin looked back to the high priestess for advice.
"It seems proper reasoning; she said with a nod.
Dinin was not so certain of his brother's motives. Not taking
his eyes off Drizzt, he said to the warrior, "Then cut off
the gnome's hands”
Drizzt didn't flinch, realizing that if he did, Dinin would
surely slaughter Belwar.
The warrior replaced the dagger on his belt and took out
his heavy sword.
"Wait; said Dinin, still eyeing Drizzt. "Release him from
the spell first; I want to hear his screams”
Several drow moved over to put the tips of their swords at
Belwar's neck as the high priestess released her magical
hold. Belwar made no moves.
The appointed drow warrior grasped his sword in both
hands, and Belwar, brave Belwar, held his arms straight out
and motionless in front of him.
Drizzt averted his gaze, unable to watch and awaiting,
fearing, the gnome's cry.
Belwar noted Drizzt's reaction. Was it compassion?
The drow warrior then swung his sword. Belwar never
took his stare off Drizzt as the sword cut across his wrists,
lighting a million fires of agony in his arms.
Neither did Belwar scream. He wouldn't give Dinin the
satisfaction. The gnome leader looked back to Drizzt one final
time as two drow fighters ushered him out of the chamber,
and he recognized the true anguish, and the apology,
behind the young drow's feigned impassive facade.
Even as Belwar was leaving, the dark elves who had
chased off after the fleeing gnomes returned from the other
tunnel. "We could not catch them in these tiny passageways”
one of them complained.
"Damn!" Dinin growled. Sending a handless gnome victim
back to Blingdenstone was one thing, but letting healthy
members of the gnome expedition escape was quite another.
"I want them caught!"
"Guenhwyvar can catch them” Masoj proclaimed, then he
called the cat to his side and eyed Drizzt all the while.
Drizzt's heart raced as the wizard patted the great cat.
"Come, my pet” Masoj said. "There is hunting left to be
done!" The wizard watched Drizzt squirm at the words,
knowing that Drizzt did not approve of Guenhwyvar engaging
in such tactics.
"They are gone?" Drizzt asked Dinin, his voice on the edge
of desperation.
"Running all the way back to Blingdenstone” Dinin replied
calmly. "If we let them”
" And will they return?"
Dinin's sour scowl reflected the absurdity of his brother's
question. "Would you?"
"Our task is complete, then” Drizzt reasoned, trying
vainly to find some way out of Masoj's ignoble designs for
the panther.
"We have won the day” Dinin agreed, "though our own
losses have been great. We may find still more fun, with the
help of the wizard's pet?'
"Fun” Masoj echoed pointedly at Drizzt. "Be gone,
Guenhwyvar, into the tunnels. Let us learn how fast a
frightened gnome may run!"
Only a few minutes later, Guenhwyvar came back into the
chamber, dragging a dead gnome in its mouth.
"Return!" Masoj commanded as Guenhwyvar dropped the
body at his feet. "Bring me more!"
Drizzt's heart dropped at the sound of the corpse flopping
to the stone floor. He looked into Guenhwyvar's eyes and
saw a sadness as profound as his own. The panther was a
hunter, as honorable in its own way as was Drizzt. To the
evil Masoj, though, Guenhwyvar was a toy and nothing
more, an instrument for his perverted pleasures, killing for
no reason other than its master's joy of killing.
In the hands of the wizard, Guenhwyvar was no more
than a murderer.
Guenhwyvar paused at the entrance to the small tunnel
and looked to Drizzt almost apologetically.
"Return!" Masoj screamed, and he kicked the cat in the
rear. Then Masoj, too, turned an eye back on Drizzt, a vindictive
eye. Masoj had missed his chance to kill the young
Do'Urden; he would have to be careful how he explained
such a mistake to his unforgiving mother. Masoj decided to
worry about that unpleasant encounter later. For now, at
least, he had the satisfaction of watching Drizzt suffer.
Dinin and the others were oblivious to the unfolding
drama between Masoj and Drizzt; too engaged in their wait
for Guenhwyvar's return; too engaged in their speculations
of the expressions of terror the gnomes would cast back at
such a perfect killer; too caught up in the macabre humor of
the moment, that perverted drow humor that brought
laughter when tears were needed.
Part 5
Zaknafein
Zaknafein Do'Urden: mentor; teacher; friend. I, in the
blind agony of my own frustrations, more than once came
to recognize Zaknafein as none of these. Did I ask of him
more than he could give? Did I expect perfection of a tormented
soul; hold Zaknafein up to standards beyond his experiences,
or standards impossible in the face of his
experiences?
I might have been him. I might have lived, trapped within
the helpless rage, buried under the daily assault of the wickedness
that is Menzoberranzan and the pervading evil that
is my own family; never in life to find escape.
It seems a logical assumption that we learn from the mistakes
of our elders. This, I believe, was my salvation. Without
the example of Zaknafein, I, too, would have found no
escape-not in life.
Is this course I have chosen a better way than the life
Zaknafein knew? I think, yes, though I find despair often
enough sometimes to long for that other way. It would have
been easier. Truth, though, is nothing in the face of selffalsehood,
and principles are of no value if the idealist cannot
live up to his own standards.
This, then, is a better way.
I live with many laments, for my people, for myself, but
mostly for that weapon master; lost to me now, who showed
me how-and why-to use a blade.
There is no pain greater than this; not the cut of a jaggededged
dagger nor the fire of a dragon's breath. Nothing
burns in your heart like the emptiness of losing something,
someone, before you truly have learned of its value. Often
now I lift my cup in a futile toast, an apology to ears that
cannot hear:
To Zak, the one who inspired my courage.
Chapter 24
To Know Our Enemies
"Eight drow dead, and one a cleric” Briza said to Matron
Malice on the balcony of House Do'Urden. Briza had rushed
back to the compound with the first reports of the encounter,
leaving her sisters at the central plaza of Menzoberranzan
with the gathered throng, awaiting further
information. "But nearly two score of the gnomes died, a
clear victory?'
"What of your brothers?" asked Malice. "How did House
Do'Urden fare in this encounter?"
"As with the surface elves, Dinin's hand slew five” replied
Briza. "They say that he led the main assault fearlessly, and
he killed the most gnomes?'
Matron Malice beamed with the news, though she suspected
that Briza, standing patiently behind a smug smile,
was holding something dramatic back from her. "What of
Drizzt?" the matron demanded, having no patience for her
daughter's games. "How many svirfnebli fell at his feet?"
"None” Briza replied, but still the smile remained. "Still
the day belonged to Drizzt," she added quickly, seeing an angry
scowl spreading across her volatile mother's face. Malice
did not seem amused.
"Drizzt defeated an earth elemental” Briza cried, "all
alone, almost, with only minor help from a wizard! The high
priestess of the patrol named the kill his!"
Matron Malice gasped and turned away. Drizzt had ever
been an enigma to her, as fine with the blade as any but lacking
the proper attitude and the proper respect. Now this: an
earth elemental! Malice herself had seen such a monster
ravage an entire drow raiding party, killing a dozen seasoned
warriors before wandering off on its way. Yet her
son, her confusing son, had defeated one single-handedly!
"Lloth will favor us this day” Briza commented, not quite
understanding her mother's reaction.
Briza's words struck an idea in Malice. "Gather your sisters”
she commanded. "We shall meet in the chapel. If
House Do'Urden so fully won the day out in the tunnels,
perhaps the Spider Queen will grace us with some information”
"Vierna and Maya await the forthcoming news in the city
plaza” Briza explained, mistakenly believing her mother to
be referring to information about the battle. "Surely we will
know the entire story within an hour”
"I care nothing for a battle against gnomes!" Malice
scolded. "You have told everything that is important to our
family; the rest does not matter. We must parlay your brothers'
heroics into gain”
To learn of our enemies!" Briza blurted as she realized
what her mother had in mind.
"Exactly” replied Malice. "To learn which house it is that
threatens House Do'Urden. If the Spider Queen truly finds
favor with us this day, she may grace us with the knowledge
we need to defeat our enemies!"
A short while later, the four high priestesses of House
Do'Urden gathered around the spider idol in the chapel anteroom.
Before them, in a bowl of the deepest onyx, burned
the sacred incense-sweet, deathlike, and favored by the
yochlol, the handmaidens of Lloth.
The flame moved through a variety of colors, from orange
to green to brilliant red. It then took shape, heard the
beckons of the four priestesses and the urgency in the voice
of Matron Malice. The top of the fire, no longer dancing,
smoothed and rounded, assumed the form of a hairless
head, then stretched upward, growing. The flame disappeared,
consumed by the yochlol's image, a half-melted pile
of wax with grotesquely elongated eyes and a drooping
mouth.
"Who has summoned me?" the small figure demanded telepathically.
The yochlol's thoughts, too powerful for its diminutive
stature, boomed within the heads of the gathered
drow.
"I have, handmaiden” Malice replied aloud, wanting her
daughters to hear. The matron bowed her head. "I am Malice,
loyal servant of the Spider Queen”
In a puff of smoke, the yochlol disappeared, leaving only
glowing incense embers in the onyx bowl. A moment later,
the handmaiden reappeared, full size, standing behind Matron
Malice. Briza, Vierna, and Maya held their breath as
the being laid two sickly tentacles on their mother's shoulders.
Matron Malice accepted the tentacles without reply, confident
in her cause for summoning the yochlol.
"Explain to me why you dare to disturb me” came the
yochlol's insidious thoughts.
"To ask a simple question” Malice replied silently, for no
words were necessary to communicate with a handmaiden.
"One whose answer you know”
"Does this question interest you so greatly?" the yochlol
asked. "You risk such dire consequences”
"It is imperative that I learn the answer” replied Matron
Malice. Her three daughters watched curiously, hearing the
yochlol's thoughts but only guessing at their mother's unspoken
replies.
"If the answer is so important, and it is known to the
handmaidens, and thus to the Spider Queen, do you not believe
that Lloth would have given it to you if she so chose?"
"Perhaps, before this day, the Spider Queen did not deem
me worthy to know” Malice responded. "Things have
changed”
The handmaiden paused and rolled its elongated eyes
back into its head as if communicating with some distant
plane.
"Greetings, Matron Malice Do'Urden” the yochlol said
aloud after a few tense moments. The creature's spoken
voice was calm and overly smooth for the thing's grotesque
appearance.
"My greetings to you, and to your mistress, Queen of Spiders”
replied Malice. She shot a wry smile at her daughters
and still didn't turn to face the creature behind her. Appar.
ently Malice's guess of Lloth's favor had been correct.
"Daermon N'a'shezbaernon has pleased Lloth” the hand.
maiden said. "The males of your house have won the day,
even above the females that journeyed with them. I must accept
Matron Malice Do'Urden's summons” The tentacles
slid off Malice's shoulders, and the yochlol stood rigid be.
hind her, awaiting her commands.
"Glad I am to please the Spider Queen” Malice began. She
sought the proper way to phrase her question. "For the
summons, as I have said, I beg only the answer to a simple
question”
" Ask it” prompted the yochlol, and the mocking tone told
Malice and her daughters that the monster already knew
the question.
"My house is threatened, say the rumors” said Malice.
"Rumors?" The yochlol laughed, an evil, grating sound.
"I trust in my sources” Malice replied defensively.
would not have called upon you if I did not believe the
threat”
"Continue” said the yochlol, amused by the whole affair.
"They are more than rumors, Matron Malice Do'Urden. Another
house plans war upon you”
Maya's immature gasp brought scornful eyes upon her
from her mother and her sisters.
"Name this house to me” Malice pleaded. "If Daermon
N'a'shezbaernon truly has pleased the Spider Queen this
day, then I bid Lloth to reveal our enemies, that we might
destroy them!"
And if this other house also has pleased the Spider
Queen?" the handmaiden mused. "Would Lloth then betray
it to you?"
"Our enemies hold every advantage” Malice protested.
"They know of House Do'Urden. No doubt they watch us
every day, laying their plans. We ask Lloth Qnly to give us
knowledge equal to that of our enemies. Reveal them and let
us prove which house is more worthy of victory”
"What if your enemies are greater than you?" asked the
handmaiden. "Would Matron Malice Do'Urden then call
upon Lloth to intervene and save her pitiful house?"
"No!" cried Malice. "We would call upon those powers that
Lloth has given us to fight our foes. Even if our enemies are
the more powerful, let Lloth be assured that they will suffer
great pain for their attack on House Do'Urden!"
Again the handmaiden sank back within itself, finding the
link to its home plane, a place darker than Menzoberranzan.
Malice clenched tightly to Briza's hand, to her right,
and Vierna's, to her left. They in turn passed along the confirmation
of their bond to Maya, at the foot of the circle.
"The Spider Queen is pleased, Matron Malice Do'Urden”
the handmaiden said at length. "Trust that she will favor
House Do'Urden more than your enemies when battle rings
out-perhaps. . . " Malice flinched at the ambiguity of that
final word, grudgingly accepting that Lloth never made any
promises, at any time.
"What of my question” Malice dared to protest, "the reason
for the summons?"
There came a bright flash that stole the four clerics' vision.
When their eyesight returned to them, they saw the
yochlol, tiny again, and glaring out at them from the flames
of the onyx bowl.
"The Spider Queen does not give an answer that is already
known!" The handmaiden proclaimed, the sheer power of
its otherworldly voice cutting into the drow ears. The fire
erupted in another blinding flash, and the yochlol disappeared,
leaving the precious bowl sundered into a dozen
pieces.
Matron Malice grabbed a large piece of the shattered
onyx and threw it against a wall. "Already known?" she
cried in rage. "Known to whom? Who in my family keeps
this secret from me?"
"Perhaps the one who knows does not know that she
knows” Briza put in, trying to calm her mother. "Or perhaps
the information is newly found, and she has not yet had the
chance to come to you with it”
"She?" growled Matron Malice. "What 'she' do you speak
of, Briza? We are all here. Are any of my daughters stupid
enough to miss such an obvious threat to our family?"
"No, Matron!" Vierna and Maya cried together, terrified of
Malice's growing wrath, rising beyond control.
"Never have I seen any sign!" said Vierna.
"Nor I!" added Maya. "By your side I have been these many
weeks, and I have seen no more than you!"
" Are you implying that I have missed something?" Malice
growled, her knuckles white at her sides.
"No, Matron!" Briza shouted above the commotion, loud
enough to settle her mother for the moment and turn Malice's
attention fully upon her eldest daughter.
"Not she, then” Briza reasoned. "He. One of your sons may
have the answer, or Zaknafein or Rizzen, perhaps”
"Yes” agreed Vierna. "They are only males, too stupid to
understand the importance of minor details”
"Drizzt and Dinin have been out of the house” added
Briza, "out of the city. In their patrol group are children of
every powerful house, every house that would dare to
threaten us!"
The fires in Malice's eyes glowed, but she relaxed at the
reasoning. "Bring them to me when they return to Menzoberranzan”
she instructed Vierna and Maya. "You” she said
to Briza, "bring Rizzen and Zaknafein. All the family must
be present, so that we may learn what we may learn!"
"The cousins, and the soldiers, too?" asked Briza. "Perhaps
one beyond the immediate family knows the answer”
"Should we bring them together, as well?" offered Vierna,
her voice edged with the rising excitement of the moment.
"A gathering of the whole clan, a general war party of
House Do'Urden?"
"No” Malice replied, "not the soldiers or the cousins. I do
not believe they are involved in this; the handmaiden would
have told us the answer if one of my direct family did not
know it. It is my embarrassment to ask a question whose an.
swer should be known to me, whose answer someone
within the circle of my family knows” She gritted her teeth
as she spat out the rest of her thoughts.
"I do not enjoy being embarrassed!"
Drizzt and Dinin came into the house a short while later,
exhausted and glad the adventure was over. They had
barely passed the entrance and turned down the wide corridor
that led to their rooms when they bumped into Zaknafein,
coming the other way.
"So the hero has returned” Zak remarked, eyeing Drizzt
directly. Drizzt did not miss the sarcasm in his voice.
"We've completed our job-successfully” Dinin shot back,
more than a little perturbed at being excluded from Zak's
greeting. "I led-"
"I know of the battle” Zak assured him. "It has been endlessly
recounted throughout the city. Now leave us, Elderboy.
I have unfinished business with your brother”
"I leave when I choose to leave!" Dinin growled.
Zak snapped a glare upon him. "I wish to speak to Drizzt,
only to Drizzt, so leave”
Dinin's hand went to his sword hilt, not a smart move. Before
he even moved the weapon hilt an inch from the scabbard,
Zak had slapped him twice in the face with one hand.
The other had somehow produced a dagger and put its tip
at Dinin's throat.
Drizzt watched in amazement, certain that Zak would kill
Dinin if this continued.
"Leave” Zak said again, "on your life”
Dinin threw his hands up and slowly backed away. "Matron
Malice will hear of this!" he warned.
"I will tell her myself” Zak laughed at him. "Do you think
she will trouble herself on your behalf, fool? As far as Matron
Malice cares, the family males determine their own hierarchy.
Go away, Elderboy. Come back when you have
found the courage to challenge me”
"Come with me, brother” Dinin said to Drizzt.
"We have business” Zak reminded Drizzt.
Drizzt looked to both of them, once and back again,
stunned by their open willingness to kill each other. "I will
stay” he decided. "I do indeed have unfinished business
with the weapon master”
"As you choose, hero” Dinin spat, and he turned on his
heel and stormed away.
"You have made an enemy” Drizzt remarked to Zak.
"I have made many” Zak laughed, "and I will make many
more before my day ends! But no mind. Your actions have
inspired jealousy in your brother-your older brother. You
are the one who should be wary”
"He hates you openly” reasoned Drizzt.
"But would gain nothing from my death” Zak replied. "I
am no threat to Dinin, but you. . . " He let the word hang in
the air.
"Why would I threaten him?" Drizzt protested. "Dinin has
nothing I desire”
"He has power” Zak explained. "He is the elderboy now
but was not always”
"He killed Nalfein, the brother I never met”
"You know of this?" said Zak. "Perhaps Dinin suspects that
another secondboy will follow the same course he took to
become the elderboy of House Do'Urden”
"Enough” Drizzt growled, tired of the whole stupid system
of ascension. How well you know it, Zaknafein, he
thought. How many did you murder to attain your position?
"An earth elemental” Zak said, blowing a low whistle with
the words. "It is a powerful foe that you defeated this day”
He bowed low, showing Drizzt mockery beyond any doubt.
"What is next for the young hero? A daemon, perhaps? A
demigod? Surely there is nothing that can-"
"Never have I heard such senseless words stream from
your mouth” Drizzt retorted. Now it was time for some sarcasm
of his own. "Is it that I have inspired jealousy in another
besides my brother?"
"Jealousy?" Zak cried. "Wipe your nose, sniveling little
boy! A dozen earth elementals have fallen to my blade!
Daemons, too! Do not overestimate your deeds or your abilities.
You are one warrior among a race of warriors. To forget
that surely will prove fatal” He ended the line with
pointed emphasis, almost in a sneer, and Drizzt began to
consider again just how real their appointed "practice" in
the gym would become.
"I know my abilities” Drizzt replied, "and my limitations. 1
have learned to survive”
"As have I” Zak shot back, "for so many centuries!"
"The gym awaits” Drizzt said calmly.
"Your mother awaits” Zak corrected. "She bids us all to
the chapel. Fear not, though. There will be time for our
meeting”
Drizzt walked past Zak without another word, suspecting
that his and Zak's blades would finish the conversation for
them. What had become of Zaknafein? Drizzt wondered.
Was this the same teacher who had trained him those years
before the Academy? Drizzt could not sort through his feelings.
Was he seeing Zak differently because of the things he
had learned of Zak's exploits, or was there truly something
different, something harder, about the weapon master's demeanor
since Drizzt had returned from the Academy?
The sound of a whip brought Drizzt from his contemplations.
"I am your patron!" he heard Rizzen say.
"That's of no consequence!" retorted a female voice, the
voice of Briza. Drizzt slipped to the corner of the next intersection
and peeked around. Briza and Rizzen faced off,
Rizzen unarmed, but Briza holding her snake-headed
whip.
"Patron” Briza laughed, "a meaningless title. You are a
male lending your seed to the matron and of no more importance”
"Four I have sired” Rizzen said indignantly.
"Three!" Briza corrected, snapping the whip to accentuate
the point. "Viema is Zaknafein's, not yours! Nalfein is
dead, leaving only two. One of those is female and above
you. Only Dinin is truly under your rank!"
Drizzt sank back against the wall and looked behind him
to the empty corridor he had just walked. He had always
suspected that Rizzen was not his true father. The male had
never paid him any mind, had never scolded him or praised
him or offered to him any advice or training. To hear Briza
say it, though, . .. and Rizzen not deny it!
Rizzen fumbled about for some retort to Briza's stinging
words. "Does Matron Malice know of your desires?" he
snarled. "Does she know that her eldest daughter seeks her
title?"
"Every eldest daughter seeks the title of matron mother”
Briza laughed at him. "Matron Malice would be a fool to suspect
otherwise. I assure you that she is not, nor am I. I will
get the title from her when she is weak with age. She knows
and accepts this as fact.'
"You admit that you will kill her?"
"If not I, then Vierna. If not Vierna, then Maya. It is our
way, stupid male. It is the word of Lloth.'
Rage burned in Drizzt as he heard the evil proclamations,
but he remained silent at the corner.
"Briza will not wait for age to steal her mother's power”
Rizzen snarled, "not when a dagger will expedite the transfer.
Briza hungers for the throne of the house!"
Rizzen's next words came out as an indecipherable
scream as the six-headed whip went to work again and
again.
Drizzt wanted to intervene, to rush out and cut them both
down, but, of course, he could not. Briza acted now as she
had been taught, followed the words of the Spider Queen in
asserting her dominance over Rizzen. She wouldn't kill him,
Drizzt knew.
But what if Briza got carried away in the frenzy? What if
she did kill Rizzen? In the empty void that was beginning to
grow in his heart, Drizzt wondered if he even cared.
"You let him escape'" Matron SiNafay roared at her son.
"You will learn not to disappoint me'"
"No, my matron!" Masoi protested. "I hit him squarely
with a lightning bolt. He never even suspected the blow to
be aimed at him! 1 could not finish the deed; the monster
had me caught in the gate to its own plane!"
SiNafay bit her lip, forced to accept her son's reasoning.
She knew that she had given Masoj a difficult mission.
Drizzt was a powerful foe, and to kill him without leaving
an obvious trail would not be easy.
"I will get him” Masoj promised, determination showing
on his face "I have the weapon readied; Drizzt will be dead
before the tenth cycle, as you commanded”
"Why should I grant you another chance?" SiNafay asked
him. "Why should I believe that you will fare better the next
time you try?"
"Because I want him dead!" Masoj cried. "More than even
you, my matron. I want to tear the life from Drizzt Do'Urden!
When he is dead, I want to rip out his heart and display
it as a trophy!"
SiNafay could not deny her son's obsession. "Granted” she
said. "Get him, Masoj Hun'ett. On your life, strike the first
blow against House Do'Urden and kill its secondboy”
Masoj bowed, the grimace never leaving his face, and
swept out of the room.
"You heard everything?" SiNafay signaled when the door
had closed behind her son. She knew that Masoj might well
have his ear to the door, and she did not want him to know
of this conversation.
"I did” Alton replied in the silent code, stepping out from
behind a curtain.
"Do you concur with my decision?" SiNafay's hands asked.
Alton was at a loss. He had no choice but to abide by his
matron mother's decisions, but he did not think that SiNafay
had been wise in sending Masoj back out after Drizzt. His silence
grew long.
"You do not approve” Matron SiNafay bluntly motioned.
"Please, Matron Mother” Alton replied quickly. "I would
not..."
"You are forgiven” SiNafay assured him. "I am not so certain
that I should have allowed Masoj a second opportunity.
Too much could go wrong”
"Then why?" Alton dared to ask. "You did not grant me a
second chance, though I desire Drizzt Do'Urden's death as
fiercely as any”
SiNafay cast him a scornful glare, sending him back on his
courageous heels. "You doubt my judgment?"
"No!" Alton cried aloud. He slapped a hand over his mouth
and dropped to his knees in terror. "Never, my matron” he
signaled silently. "I just do not understand the problem as
clearly as you. Forgive me my ignorance”
SiNafay's laughter sounded like the hiss of a hundred angry
snakes. "We see together in this matter” she assured Alton.
"I would no more give Masoj a second chance than I
gave you”
"But-" Alton started to protest.
"Masoj will go back after Drizzt, but this time he will not
be alone” SiNafay explained. "You will follow him, Alton
DeVir. Keep him safe and finish the deed, on your life”
Alton beamed at the news that he would finally find some
taste of vengeance. SiNafay's final threat didn't even con.
cem him. "Could it ever be any other way?" his hands asked
casually.
"Think!" Malice growled, her face close, her breath hot on
Drizzt's face. "You know somethifig!"
Drizzt slumped back from the overpowering figure and
glanced nervously around at his gathered family. Dinin,
similarly grilled just a moment ago, kneeled with his chin in
hand. He tried vainly to come up with an answer before Matron
Malice upped the level of the interrogation techniques.
Dinin did not miss Briza's motions toward her snake whip,
and the unnerving sight did little to aid his memory.
Malice slapped Drizzt hard across the face and stepped
away. "One of you has learned the identity of our enemies”
she snapped at her sons. "Out there, on patrol, one of you
has seen some hint, some sign”
"Perhaps we saw it but did not know it for what it was”
Dinin offered.
"Silence!" Malice screamed, her face bright with rage.
"When you know the answer to my question, you may
speak! Only then!" She turned to Briza. "Help Dinin find his
memory!"
Dinin dropped his head to his arms, folded on the floor in
front of him, and arched his back to accept the torture. 1b
do otherwise would only enrage Malice more.
Drizzt closed his eyes and recounted the events of his
many patrols. He jerked involuntarily when he heard the
snake whip's crack and his brother's soft groan.
"Masoj” Drizzt whispered, almost unconsciously. He
looked up at his mother, who held her hand out to halt Briza's
attacks-to Briza's dismay.
"Masoj Hun'ett” Drizzt said more loudly. "In the fight
against the gnomes, he tried to kill me”
All the family, particularly Malice and Dinin, leaned forward
toward Drizzt, hanging on his every word.
"When I battled the elemental” Drizzt explained, spitting
out the last word as a curse upon Zaknafein. He cast an angry
glare at the weapon master and continued, "Masoj
Hun'ett struck me down with a bolt of lightning”
"He may have been shooting for the monster” Vierna insisted.
"Masoj insisted that it was he who killed the elemental,
but the high priestess of the patrol denied his claim”
"Masoj waited” Drizzt replied. "He did nothing until I began
to gain the advantage over the monster. Then he loosed
his magic, as much at me as at the elemental. I think he
hoped to destroy us both”
"House Hun'ett” Matron Malice whispered.
"Fifth House” Briza remarked, "under Matron SiNafay”
"So that is our enemy” said Malice.
"Perhaps not” said Dinin, wondering even as he spoke the
words why he hadn't left well enough alone. To disprove the
theory only invited more whipping.
Matron Malice did not like his hesitation as he reconsidered
the argument. "Explain!" she commanded.
"Masoj Hun'ett was angry at being excluded from the surface
raid” said DInin. "We left him in the city, only to witness
our triumphant return” Dinin fixed his eyes straight on his
brother. "Masoj has ever been jealous of Drizzt and all the
glories that my brother has found, rightly or wrongly. Many
are jealous of Drizzt and would see him dead”
Drizzt shifted uncomfortably in his seat, knowing the last
words to be an open threat. He glanced over to Zaknafein
and marked the weapon master's smug smile.
" Are you certain of your words?" Malice said to Drizzt,
shaking him from his private thoughts.
"There is the cat” Dinin interrupted, "Masoj Hun'ett's
magical pet, though it holds closer to Drizzt's side than to
the wizard's”
"Guenhwyvar walks the point beside me” Drizzt protested,
"a position that you ordered”
"Masoj does not like it” Dinin retorted.
Perhaps that is why you put the cat there, Drizzt thought,
but he kept the words to himself. Was he seeing conspiracies
in coincidence? Or was his world so truly filled with devious
schemes and silent struggles for power?
"Are you certain of your words?" Malice asked Drizzt
again, pulling him from his pondering.
"Masoj Hun'ett tried to kill me” he asserted. "I do not
know his reasons, but his intent I do not doubt!"
"House Hun'ett, then” Briza remarked, "a mighty foe”
"We must learn of them” Malice said. "Dispatch the
scouts! I will know the count of House Hun'ett's soldiers, its
wizards, and, particularly, its clerics”
"If we are wrong” Dinin said. "If House Hun'ett is not the
conspiring house-"
"We are not wrong!" Malice screamed at him.
"The yochlol said that one of us knows the identity of our
enemy” reasoned Vierna. "All we have is Drizzt's tale of
Masoj”
"Unless you are hiding something” Matron Malice
growled at Dinin, a threat so cold and wicked that it stole
the blood from the elderboy's face.
Dinin shook his head emphatically and slumped back,
having nothing more to add to the conversation.
"Prepare a communion” Malice said to Briza. 'Let us learn
of Matron SiNafay's standing with the Spider Queen”
Drizzt watched incredulously as the preparations began
at a frantic pace, each command from Matron Malice following
a practiced defensive course. It wasn't the precision
of Drizzt's family's battle planning that amazed him-he
would expect nothing less from this group. It was the eager
gleam in every eye.
Chapter 25
The Weapon Masters
"Impudent!" growled the yochlol. The fire in the brazier
puffed, and the creature again stood behind Malice, again
draped dangerous tentacles over the matron mother. "You
dare to summon me again?"
Malice and her daughters glanced around, on the edge of
panic. They knew that the mighty being was not toying with
them; the handmaiden truly was enraged this time.
"House Do'Urden pleased the Spider Queen, it is true” the
yochlol answered their unspoken thoughts, "but that one
act does not dispel the displeasure your family brought
upon Lloth in the recent past. Do not think that all is forgiven,
Matron Malice Do'Urden!"
How small and vulnerable Matron Malice felt now! Her
power paled in the face of the wrath of one of Lloth's personal
servants.
"Displeasure?" she dared to whisper. "How has my family
brought displeasure to the Spider Queen? By what act?"
The handmaiden's laughter erupted in a spout of flames
and flying spiders, but the high priestesses held their positions.
They accepted the heat and the crawling things as
part of their penance.
"I have told you before, Matron Malice Do'Urden” the
yochlol snarled with its droopy mouth, "and I shall tell you
one final time. The Spider Queen does not reply to questions
whose answers are already known!" In a blast' of explosive
energy that sent the four females of House
Do'Urden tumbling to the floor, the handmaiden was gone.
Briza was the first to recover. She prudently rushed over
to the brazier and smothered the remaining flames, thus
closing the gate to the Abyss, the yochlol's home plane.
"Who?" screamed Malice, the powerful matriarch once
again. "Who in my family has invoked the wrath of Lloth?"
Malice appeared small again then, as the implications of the
yochlol's warning became all too clear. House Do'Urden was
about to go to war with a powerful family. Without Lloth's
favor, House Do'Urden likely would cease to exist.
"We must find the perpetrator” Malice instructed her
daughters, certain that none of them was involved. They
were high priestesses, one and all. If any of them had done
some misdeed in the eyes of the Spider Queen, the summoned
yochlol surely would have exacted punishment on
the spot. By itself, the handmaiden could have leveled
House Do'Urden.
Briza pulled the snake whip from her belt. "I will get the
information we require!" she promised.
"No!" said Matron Malice. "We must not reveal our search.
Be it a soldier or a member of House Do'Urden, the guilty
one is trained and hardened against pain. We cannot hope
that torture will pull the confession from his lips; not when
he knows the consequences of his actions. We must discover
the cause of Lloth's displeasure immediately and
properly punish the criminal. The Spider Queen must stand
behind us in our struggles!"
"How, then, are we to discern the perpetrator?" the eldest
daughter complained, reluctantly replacing the snake whip
on her belt.
"Vierna and Maya, leave us” Matron Malice instructed.
"Say nothing of these revelations and do nothing to hint at
our purpose”
The two younger daughters bowed and scurried away,
not happy with their secondary roles but unable to do anything
about them.
"First we will look” Malice said to Briza. "We will see if we
can learn of the guilty one from afar”
Briza understood. "The scrying bowl” she said. She
rushed from the anteroom and into the chapel proper. In
the central altar she found the valuable item, a wide golden
bowl laced throughout with black pearls. Hands trembling,
Briza placed the bowl atop the altar and reached into the
most sacred of the many compartments. This was the holding
bin for the prized possession of House Do'Urden, a great
onyx chalice.
Malice then joined Briza in the chapel proper and took the
chalice from her. Moving to the large font at the entrance to
the great room, Malice dipped the chalice into a sticky fluid,
the unholy water of her religion. She then chanted, "Spiderae
aught icor ven” The ritual complete, Malice moved back
to the altar and poured the unholy water into the golden
bowl.
She and Briza sat down to watch.
Drizzt stepped onto the floor of Zaknafein's training gym
for the first time in more than a decade and felt as if he had
come home. He'd spent the best years of his young life
here-almost wholly here. For all the disappointments he
had encountered since-and no doubt would continue to
experience throughout his life-Drizzt would never forget
that brief sparkle of innocence, that joy, he had known
when he was a student in Zaknafein's gym.
Zaknafein entered and walked over to face his former student.
Drizzt saw nothing familiar or comforting in the
weapon master's face. A perpetual scowl now replaced the
once common smile. It was an angry demeanor that hated
everything around it, perhaps Drizzt most of all. Or had
Zaknafein always worn such a grimace? Drizzt had to wonder.
Had nostalgia glossed over Drizzt's memories of those
years of early training? Was this mentor, who had so often
warmed Drizzt's heart with a lighthearted chuckle, actually.
the cold, lurking monster that Drizzt now saw before him?
"Which has changed, Zaknafein” Drizzt asked aloud,
"you, my memories, or my perceptions?"
Zak seemed not even to hear the whispered question.
"Ah, the young hero has returned” he said, "the warrior
with exploits beyond his years”
"Why do you mock me?" Dnzzt protested.
"He who killed the hook horrors” Zak continued. His
swords were out in his hands now, and Drizzt responded
by drawing his scimitars. There was no need to ask the
rules of engagement in this contest, or the choice of weapons.
Drizzt knew, had known before he had ever come here,
that there would be no rules this time. The weapons would
be their weapons of preference, the blades that each of
them had used to kill so many foes.
"He who killed the earth elemental” Zak snarled derisively.
He launched a measured attack, a simple lunge with
one blade. Drizzt batted it aside without even thinking of
the parry.
Sudden fires erupted in Zak's eyes, as if the first contact
had sundered all the emotional bonds that had tempered his
thrust. "He who killed the girl child of the surface elves!" he
cried, an accusation and no compliment. Now came the second
attack, vicious and powerful, an arcing swipe descending
at Drizzt's head. "Who cut her apart to appease his own
thirst for blood!"
Zak's words knocked Dnzzt off his guard emotionally,
wrapped his heart in confusion like some devious mental
whip. Drizzt was a seasoned warrior, though, and his reflexes
did not register the emotional distraction. A scimitar
came up to catch the descending sword and deflected it
harmlessly aside.
"Murderer!" Zak snarled openly. "Did you enjoy the dying
child's screams?" He came at Drizzt in a furious whirl,
swords dipping and diving, slicing at every angle.
Drizzt, enraged by the hypocrite's accusations, matched
the fury, screaming out for no better reason than to hear
the anger of his own voice.
Any watching the battle would have found no breath in
the next few blurring moments. Never had the Underdark
witnessed such a vicious fight as when these two masters of
the blade each attacked the demon possessing the otherand
himself.
Adamantite sparked and nicked, droplets of blood spat.
tered both the combatants, though neither felt any pain, ,
and neither knew if he'd injured the other.
Drizzt came with a two-blade sidelong swipe that drove
Zak's swords out wide. Zak followed the motion quickly,
turned a complete circle, and slammed back into Drizzt's
thrusting scimitars with enough force to knock the young
warrior from his feet. Drizzt fell into a roll and came back
up to meet his charging adversary.
A thought came over him.
Drizzt came up high, too high, and Zak drove him back on
his heels. Drizzt knew what would soon be coming; he invited
it openly. Zak kept Drizzt's weapons high through sev.
eral combined maneuvers. He then went with the move that
had defeated Drizzt in the past, expecting that the best
Drizzt could attain would be equal footing: double-thrust
low.
Drizzt executed the appropriate cross-down parry, as he
had to, and Zak tensed, waiting for his eager opponent to
try to improve the move. "Child killer!" he growled, goading
on Drizzt.
He didn't know that Drizzt had found the solution.
With all the anger he had ever known, all the disappointments
of his young life gathering within his foot, Drizzt focused
on Zak. That smug face, feigning smiles and drooling
for blood.
Between the hilts, between the eyes, Drizzt kicked, blowing
out every ounce of rage in a single blow.
Zak's nose crunched flat. His eyes lolled upward, and
blood exploded over his hollow cheeks. Zak knew that he
was falling, that the devilish young warrior would be on
him in a flash, gaining an advantage that Zak could not hope
to overcome.
"What of you, Zaknafein Do'Urden?" he heard Drizzt
snarl, distantly, as though he were falling far away. "I have
heard of the exploits of House Do'Urden's weapon master!
How he so enjoys killing!" The voice was closer now, as
Drizzt stalked in, and as the rebounding rage of Zaknafein
sent him spiraling back to the battle.
"I have heard how murder comes so very easily to Zaknafein!"
Drizzt spat derisively. "The murder of clerics, of other
drow! Do you so enjoy it all?" He ended the question with a
blow from each scimitar, attacks meant to kill Zak, to kill the
demon in them both.
But Zaknafein was now fully back to consciousness, hating
himself and Drizzt equally. At the last moment, his
swords came up and crossed, lightning fast, throwing
Drizzt's arms wide. Then Zak finished with a kick of his
own, not so strong from the prone position but accurate in
its search for Drizzt's groin.
Drizzt sucked in his breath and twirled away, forcing
himself back into composure when he saw Zaknafein, still
dazed, rising to his feet. "Do you so enjoy it all?" he managed
to ask again.
"Enjoy?" the weapon master echoed.
"Does it bring you pleasure?" Drizzt grimaced.
"Satisfaction!" Zak corrected. "I kill. Yes, I kill”
"You teach others to kill!"
"To kill drow!" Zak roared, and he was back in Drizzt's
face, his weapons up but waiting for Drizzt to make the
next move.
Zak's words again entwined Drizzt in a mesh of confusion.
Who was this drow standing before him?
"Do you think that your mother would let me live if I did
not serve her evil designs?" Zak cried.
Drizzt did not understand.
"She hates me” Zak said, more in control as he began to
understand Drizzt's confusion, "despises me for what I
know” Drizzt cocked his head.
" Are you so blind to the evil around you?" Zak yelled in his
face. "Or has it consumed you, as it consumes all of them, in
this murderous frenzy that we call life?"
"The frenzy that holds you?" Drizzt retorted, but there
was little conviction in his voice now. If he understood Zak's
words correctly-if Zak played the killing game simply because
of his hatred for the perverted drow-the most Drizzt
could blame him for was cowardice.
"No frenzy holds me” Zak replied. "I live as best I can.
survive in a world that is not my own, not my heart” The lament
in his words, the droop of his head as he admitted his
helplessness, struck a familiar chord in Drizzt. "I kill, kill
drow, to serve Matron Malice-to placate the rage, the frustration,
that I know in my soul. When I hear the children
scream . . . " His gaze snapped up on Drizzt and he rushed in
all of a sudden, his fury returned tenfold.
Drizzt tried to get his scimitars up, but Zak knocked one
of them across the room and drove the other aside. He
rushed in step with Drizzt's awkward retreat until he had
Drizzt pinned against a wall. The tip of Zak's sword drew a
droplet of blood from Drizzt's throat.
"The child lives!" Drizzt gasped. "I swear, I did not kill the
elven child!"
Zak relaxed a bit but still held Drizzt, sword to throat.
Dinin said-"
"Dinin was mistaken” Drizzt replied frantically. "Fooled
by me. I knocked the child down-only to spare her-and
covered her with the blood of her murdered mother to
mask my own cowardice!"
Zak leaped back, overwhelmed.
"I killed no elves that day” Drizzt said to him. "The only
times I desired to kill were my own companions!"
"So now we know” said Briza, staring into the scrying
bowl, watching the conclusion of the battle between Drizzt
and Zaknafein and hearing their every word. "It was Drizzt
who angered the Spider Queen”
"You suspected him all along, as did I” Matron Malice replied,
"though we both hoped differently.
"So much promise!" Briza lamented. "How I wish that one -
had learned his place, his values. Perhaps. . . "
"Mercy?" Matron Malice snapped at her. "Do you show
mercy that would further invoke the Spider Queen's displeasure?"
"No, Matron” Briza replied. "I had only hoped that Drizzt
could be used in the future, as you have used Zaknafein all
these years. Zaknafein is growing older”
"We are about to fight a war, my daughter” Malice reminded
her. "Lloth must be appeased. Your brother has
brought his fate upon himself; his actions were his own to
decide”
"He decided wrongly”
The words hit Zaknafein harder than Drizzt's boot had.
The weapon master threw his swords to the ends of the
room and rushed in on Drizzt. He buried him in a hug so intense
that it took the young drow a long moment to even realize
what had happened.
"You have survived!" Zak said, his voice broken by muf.
fled tears. "Survived the Academy, where all the others
died!"
Drizzt returned the embrace, tentatively, still not guessing
the depth of Zak's elation.
"My son!"
Drizzt nearly fainted, overwhelmed by the admission of
what he had always suspected, and even more so by the
knowledge that he was not the only one in his dark world
angered by the ways of the drow. He was not alone.
"Why?" Drizzt asked, pushing Zak out to arm's length.
"Why have you stayed?"
Zak looked at him incredulously. "Where would 1 go? No
one, not even a drow weapon master would survive for long
out in the caverns of the Underdark. Tho many monsters,
and other races, hunger for the sweet blood of dark elves”
"Surely you had options”
"The surface?" Zak replied. "Th face the painful inferno
every day? No, my son, I am trapped, as you are trapped”
Drizzt had feared that statement, had feared that he
would find no solution from his newfound father to the dilemma
that was his life. Perhaps there were no answers.
"You will do well in Menzoberranzan” Zak said to comfort
him. "You are strong, and Matron Malice will find an appropriate
place for your talents, whatever your heart may desire”
"To live a life of assassinations, as you have?" Drizzt asked,
trying futilely to keep the rage out of his words.
"What choice is before us?" Zak answered, his eyes seeking
the unjudging stone of the floor.
"I will not kill drow” Drizzt declared flatly.
Zak's eyes snapped back on him. "You will” he assured his
son. "In Menzoberranzan, you will kill or be killed”
Drizzt looked away, but Zak's words pursued him, could
not be blocked out.
"There is no other way; the weapon master continued
softly. "Such is our world. Such is our life. You have escaped
this long, but you will find that your luck soon will change”
He grabbed Drizzt's chin firmly and forced his son to look at
him directly.
"I wish that it could be different; Zak said honestly, "but it
is not such a bad life. I do not lament killing dark elves. I perceive
their deaths as their salvation from this wicked existence.
If they care so dearly for their Spider Queen, then let
them go and visit her!"
Zak's growing smile washed away suddenly. "Except for
the children” he whispered. "Often have I heard the cries of
dying children, though never, I promise you, have I caused
them. I have always wondered if they, too, are evil, born
evil. Or if the weight of our dark world bends them to fit our
foul ways”
"The ways of the demon Lloth; Drizzt agreed.
They both paused for many heartbeats, each privately
weighing the realities of his own personal dilemma. Zak was
next to speak, having long ago come to terms with the life
that was offered to him.
"Lloth; he chuckled. "She is a vicious queen, that one. I
would sacrifice everything for a chance at her ugly face!"
"I almost believe you would” Drizzt whispered, finding
his smile.
Zak jumped back from him. "I would indeed” he laughed
heartily. "So would you!"
Drizzt flipped his lone scimitar up into the air, letting it
spin over twice before catching it again by the hilt. "True
enough!" he cried. "But no longer would I be alone!"
Chapter 26
Angler Of The Underdark
Drizzt wandered alone through the maze of Menzoberranzan,
drifting past the stalagmite mounds, under the leering
points of the great stone spears that hung from the
cavern's high ceiling. Matron Malice had specifically ordered
all of the family to remain within the house, fearing
an assassination attempt by House Hun'ett. Too much had
happened to Drizzt this day for him to obey. He had to
think, and contemplating such blasphemous thoughts, even
silently, in a house full of nervous clerics might get him into
serious trouble.
This was the quiet time of the city; the heat-light of Narbondel
was only a sliver at the stone's base, and most of the
drow comfortably slept within their stone houses. Soon after
he slipped through the adamantite gate of the House
Do'Urden compound, Drizzt began to understand the wisdom
of Matron Malice's command. The city's quiet now'
seemed to him like the crouched hush of a predator. It was
poised to drop upon him from behind everyone of the:
many blind corners he faced on this trek. "
He would find no solace here in which he might truly contemplate
the day's events, the revelations of Zaknafein, kindred
in more than blood. Drizzt decided to break all the
rules-that was the way of the drow, after all-and head out
of the city, down the tunnels he knew so well from his
weeks of patrol.
An hour later, he was still walking, lost in thought and
feeling safe enough, for he was well within the boundaries
of the patrol region. '
He entered a high corridor, ten paces wide and with broken
walls lined in loose rubble and crossed by many ledges.
It seemed as though the passage once had been much wider.
The ceiling was far beyond sight, but Drizzt had been
through here a dozen times, up on the many ledges, and he
gave the place no thought.
He envisioned the future, the times that he and Zaknafein,
his father, would share now that no secrets separated them.
Together they would be unbeatable, a team of weapon masters,
bonded by steel and emotions. Did House Hun'ett truly
understand what it would be facing? The smile on Drizzt's
face disappeared as soon as he considered the implications:
he and Zak, together, cutting through House Hun'ett's ranks
with deadly ease, through the ranks of drow elves-killing
their own people.
Drizzt leaned against the wall for support, understanding
firsthand the frustration that had racked his father for
many centuries. Drizzt did not want to be like Zaknafein,
living only to kill, existing in a protective sphere of violence,
but what choices lay before him? Leave the city?
Zak had balked when Drizzt asked him why he had not
left. "Where would I go?" Drizzt whispered now, echoing
Zak's words. His father had proclaimed them trapped, and
so it seemed to Drizzt.
"Where would I go?" he asked again. "Travel the Underdark,
where our people are so despised and a single drow
would become a target for everything he passed? Or to the
surface, perhaps, and let that ball of fire in the sky burn out
my eyes so that I may not witness my own death when the
elven folk descend upon me?"
The logic of the reasoning trapped Drizzt as it had
trapped Zak. Where could a drow elf go? Nowhere in all the
Realms would an elf of dark skin be accepted.
Was the choice then to kill? to kill drow?
Drizzt rolled over against the wall, his physical movement
an unconscious act, for his mind whirled down the maze of
his future. It took him a moment to realize that his back was
against something other than stone.
He tried to leap away, alert again now that his surroundings
were not as they should be. When he pushed out, his
feet came up from the ground and he landed back in his
original position. Frantically, before he took the time to consider
his predicament, Drizzt reached behind his neck with
both hands.
They, too, stuck fast to the translucent cord that held him.
Drizzt knew his folly then, and all the tugging in the world
would not free his hands from the line of the angler of the
Underdark, a cave fisher.
"Foo!!" he scolded himself as he felt himself lifted from the
ground. He should have suspected this, should have been
more careful alone in the caverns. But to reach out barehanded!
He looked down at the hilts of his scimitars, useless
in their sheaths.
The cave fisher reeled him in, pulled him up the long wall
toward its waiting maw.
Masoj Hun'ett smiled smugly to himself as he watched
Drizzt depart the city. Time was running short for him, and
Matron SiNafay would not be pleased if he failed again in his
mission to destroy the secondboy of House Do'Urden. Now;
Masoj's patience had apparently paid off, for Drizzt had
come out alone, had left the city! There were no witnesses.
It was too easy.
Eagerly the wizard pulled the onyx figurine from his
pouch and dropped it to the ground. "Guenhwyvar!" he
called as loudly as he dared, glancing around at the nearest
stalagmite house for signs of activity.
The dark smoke appeared and transformed a moment
later into Masoj's magical panther. Masoj rubbed his hands
together, thinking himself marvelous for having concocted
such a devious and ironic end to the heroics of Drizzt
Do'Urden
"I have a job for you” he told the cat, "one that you'll not
enjoy!"
Guenhwyvar slumped casually and yawned as though the
wizard's words were hardly a revelation.
"Your point companion has gone out on patrol” Masoj explained
as he pointed down the tunnel, "by himself. It's too
dangerous”
Guenhwyvar stood back up, suddenly very interested.
"Drizzt should not be out there alone” Masoj continued.
"He could get killed”
The evil inflections of his voice told the panther his intent
before he ever spoke the words.
"Go to him, my pet” Masoj purred. "Find him out there in
the gloom and kill him!" He studied Guenhwyvar's reaction,
measured the horror he had laid on the cat. Guenhwyvar
stood rigid, as unmoving as the statue used to summon it.
"Go!" Masoj ordered. "You cannot resist your master's
commands! I am your master, unthinking beast! You seem to
forget that fact too often!"
Guenhwyvar resisted for a long moment, a heroic act in it.
self, but the magic's urges, the incessant pull of the master's
command, outweighed any instinctive feelings the great
panther might have had. Reluctantly at first, but then
pulled by the primordial desires of the hunt, Guenhwyvar
sped off between the enchanted statues guarding the tunnel
and easily found Drizzt's scent.
Alton DeVir slumped back behind the largest of the stalagmite
mounds, disappointed at Masoj's tactics. Masoj would
let the cat do his work for him; Alton would not even witness
Drizzt Do'Urden's death!
Alton fingered the powerful wand that Matron SiNafay
had given to him when he set out after Masoj that night.
It seemed that the item would play no role in Drizzt's
demise.
Alton took comfort in the item, knowing that he would
have ample opportunity to put it to proper use against the
remainder of House Do'Urden.
Drizzt fought for the first half of his ascent, kicking and
spinning, ducking his shoulders under any outcrop he
passed in a futile effort to hold back the pull of the cave
fisher. He knew from the outset, though, against those war.
rior instincts that refused to surrender, that he had no
chance to halt the incessant pull.
Halfway up, one shoulder bloodied, the other bruised,
and with the floor nearly thirty feet below him, Drizzt resigned
himself to his fate. If he would find a chance against
the crablike monster that waited at the top of the line, it
would be in the last instant of the ascent. For now, he could
only watch and wait.
Perhaps death was not so bad an alternative to the life he
would find among the drow, trapped within the evil framework
of their dark society. Even Zaknafein, so strong and
powerful and wise with age, had never been able to come to
terms with his existence in Menzoberranzan; what chance
did Drizzt have?
When Drizzt had passed through his small bout with selfpity,
when the angle of his ascent changed, showing him the
lip of the final ledge, the fighting spirit within him took over
once again. The cave fisher might have him, he decided
then, but he'd put a boot or two into the thing's eyes before
it got its meal!
He could hear the clacking of the anxious monster's eight
crablike legs. Drizzt had seen a cave fisher before, though it
had scrambled away before he and his patrol could catch up
to it. He had imagined it then, and could imagine it now, in
battle. Two of its legs ended in wicked claws, pincers that
snipped up prey to fit into the maw.
Drizzt turned himself face-in to the cliff, wanting to view
the thing as soon as his head crested the ledge. The anxious
clacking grew louder, resounding alongside the thumping
of Drizzt's heart. He reached the ledge.
Drizzt peeked over, only a foot or two from the monster's
long proboscis, with the maw just inches behind. Pincers
reached out to grab him before he could get his footing; he
would get no chance to kick out at the thing.
He closed his eyes, hoping again that death would be preferable
to his life in Menzoberranzan.
A familiar growl then brought him from his thoughts.
Slipping through the maze of ledges, Guenhwyvar came
in sight of the cave fisher and Drizzt just before Drizzt had
reached the final ledge. This was a moment of salvation or
death for the cat as surely as for Drizzt. Guenhwyvar had
traveled here under Masoj's direct command, giving no consideration
to its duty and acting only on its own instincts in
accord with the compelling magic. Guenhwyvar could not
go against that edict, that premise for the cat's very existence
. .. until now.
The scene before the panther, with Drizzt only seconds
from death, brought to Guenhwyvar a strength unknown
to the cat, and unforeseen to the creator of the magical figurine.
That instant of terror gave a life to Guenhwyvar beyond
the scope of the magic.
By the time Drizzt had opened his eyes, the battle was in
full fury. Guenhwyvar leaped atop the cave fisher but
nearly went right over, for the monster's six remaining legs
were rooted to the stone by the same goo that held Drizzt
fast to the long filament. Undaunted, the cat raked and bit, a
ball of frenzy trying to find a break in the fisher's armored
shell.
The monster retaliated with its pincers, flipping them
over its back with surprising agility and finding one of
Guenhwyvar's forelegs.
Drizzt was no longer being pulled in; the monster had
other business to attend to.
Pincers cut through Guenhwyvar's soft flesh, but the cat's
blood was not the only dark fluid staining the cave fisher's
back. Powerful feline claws tore up a section of the shell armor,
and great teeth plunged beneath it. As the cave fisher's
blood splattered to the stone, its legs began to slip.
Watching the goo under the crablike legs dissolve as the
blood of the monster struck it, Drizzt understood what
would happen as a line of that same blood made its way
down the filament, toward him. He would have to strike fast
if the opportunity came; he would have to be ready to help
Guenhwyvar.
The fisher stumbled to the side, rolling Guenhwyvar
away and spinning Dmzt over in a complete bumping circuit.
Still the blood oozed down the line, and Drizzt felt the filament's
hold loosen from his top hand as the liquid came in
contact.
Guenhwyvar was up again, facing the fisher, looking for
an attack route through the waiting pincers.
Drizzt's hand was free. He snapped up a scimitar and dove
straight ahead, sinking the tip into the fisher's side. The
monster reeled about, the jolt and the continuing blood
flow shaking Drizzt from the filament altogether. The drow
was agile enough to find a handhold before he had fallen
far, though his drawn scimitar tumbled down to the floor.
Drizzt's diversion opened the fisher's defenses for just a
moment, and Guenhwyvar did not hesitate. The cat barreled
into its foe, teeth finding the same fleshy hold they
had already ripped. They went deeper, under the skin, "
crushing organs as Guenhwyvar's raking claws kept the pincers
at bay.
By the time Drizzt climbed back to the level of the battle,
the cave fisher shuddered in the throes of death. Drizzt
pulled himself up and rushed to his friend's side.
Guenhwyvar retreated step for step, its ears flattened and
teeth bared.
At first, Drizzt thought that the pain of a wound blinded
the cat, but a quick survey dispelled that theory. Guenhwyvar
had only one injury, and that was not serious. Drizzt
had seen the cat with worse.
Guenhwyvar continued to retreat, continued to growl, as
the incesant pounding of Masoi's command, back again after
the instant of terror, hammered at its heart. The cat
fought the urges, tried to see Drizzt as an ally, not as prey,
but the urges.
"What is wrong, my friend?" Drizzt asked softly, resisting
the urge to draw his remaining blade in defense. He
dropped to one knee. "Do you not recognize me? How often
we have fought together!"
Guenhwyvar crouched low and tamped down its hind
legs, preparing, Drizzt knew, to spring. Still Drizzt did not
draw his weapon, did nothing to threaten the cat. He had to
trust that Guenhwyvar was true to his perceptions, that the
panther was everything he believed it to be. What now
could be guiding these unfamiliar reactions? What had
brought Guenhwyvar out here at this late hour?
Drizzt found his answers when he remembered Matron
Malice's warnings about leaving House Do'Urden.
"Masoj sent you to kill me!" he said bluntly. His tone confused
the cat, and it relaxed a bit, not yet ready to spring.
"You saved me, Guenhwyvar. You resisted the command”
Guenhwyvar's growl sounded in protest.
"You could have let the cave fisher do the deed for you”
Drizzt retorted, "but you did not! You charged in and saved
my life! Fight the urges, Guenhwyvar! Remember me as
your friend, a better companion than Masoj Hun'ett could
ever be!"
Guenhwyvar backed away another step, caught in a pull
that it could not yet resolve. Drizzt watched the cat's ears
come up from its head and knew that he was winning the
contest.
"Masoj claims ownership” he went on, confident that the
cat, through some intelligence Drizzt could not know, understood
the meaning of his words. "I claim friendship. I am
your friend, Guenhwyvar, and I'll not fight against you” He
leaped forward, arms unthreateningly wide, face and chest
fully exposed. "Even at the cost of my own life!"
Guenhwyvar did not strike. Emotions pulled at the cat
stronger than any magical spell, those same emotions that
had put Guenhwyvar into action when it first saw Drizzt in
the cave fisher's clutches.
Guenhwyvar reared up and leaped out, crashing into
Drizzt and knocking him to his back, then burying him in a
rush of playful slaps and mock bites.
The two friends had won again; they had defeated two
foes this day.
When Drizzt paused from the greeting to consider all that
had transpired, though, he realized that one of the victories
was not yet complete. Guenhwyvar was his in spirit now'
but still held by another, one who did not deserve the cat,
who enslaved the cat in a life that Drizzt could no longer
witness.
None of the confusion that had followed Drizzt Do'Urden
out of Menzoberranzan that night remained. For the first
time in his life, he saw the road he must follow, the path to
his own freedom.
He remembered Zaknafein's warnings, and the same impossible
alternatives that he had contemplated, to no resolution.
Where, indeed, could a drow elf go?
"Worse to be trapped within a lie; he whispered absently.
The panther cocked its head to the side, sensing again that
Drizzt's words carried great importance. Drizzt returned
the curious stare with one that came suddenly grim.
"Take me to your master” he demanded, "your false master”
Chapter 27
Untroubled Dreams
Zaknafein sank down into his bed in an easy sleep, the
most comfortable rest he had ever known. Dreams did
come to him this night, a rush of dreams. Far from tumultuous,
they only enhanced his comfort. Zak was free now of
his secret, of the lie that had dominated every day of his
adult life.
Drizzt had survived! Even the dreaded Academy of Menzoberranzan
could not daunt the youth's indomitable spirit
and sense of morality. Zaknafein Do'Urden was no longer
alone. The dreams that played in his mind showed him the
same wonderful possibilities that had followed Drizzt out of
the city.
Side by side they would stand, unbeatable, two as one
against the perverted foundations of Menzoberranzan.
A stinging pain in his foot brought Zak from his slumbers.
He saw Briza immediately, at the bottom of his bed, her
snake whip in hand. Instinctively, Zak reached over the side
to fetch his sword.
The weapon was gone. Vierna stood at the side of the
room, holding it. On the opposite side, Maya held Zak's
other sword.
How had they come in so stealthily? Zak wondered. Magical
silence, no doubt, but Zak was still surprised that he had
not sensed their presence in time. Nothing had ever caught
him unawares, awake or asleep.
Never before had he slept so soundly, so peacefully. Perhaps,
in Menzoberranzan, such pleasant dreams were dangerous.
"Matron Malice will see you” Briza announced.
"I am not properly dressed” Zak replied casually. "My belt
and weapons, if you please”
"We do not please!" Briza snapped, more at her sisters
than at Zak. "You will not need the weapons”
Zak thought otherwise.
"Come, now” Briza commanded, and she raised the whip.
"I should be certain of Matron Malice's intentions before I
acted so boldly, were I you” Zak warned. Briza, reminded of
the power of the male she now threatened, lowered her
weapon.
Zak rolled out of bed, putting the same intense glare alternately
on Maya and Vierna, watching their reactions to better
conclude Malice's reasons for summoning him.
They surrounded him as he left his room, keeping a cautious
but ready distance from the deadly weapon master.
"Must be serious” Zak remarked quietly, so that only Briza,
in front of the troupe, could hear. Briza turned and flashed
him a wicked smile that did nothing to dispel his suspicions.
Neither did Matron Malice, who leaned forward in her
throne in anticipation even before they entered the room.
"Matron” Zak offered, dipping into a bow and pulling the
side of his nightshirt out wide to draw attention to his inappropriate
dress. He wanted to let Malice know his feelings
of being ridiculed at such a late hour.
The matron offered no return greeting. She rested back
in her throne. One slender hand rubbed her sharp chin,
while her eyes locked upon Zaknafein.
"Perhaps you could tell me why you've summoned me”
Zak dared to say, his voice still holding an edge of sarcasm. "I
would prefer to return to my slumbers. We should not give
House Hun'ett the advantage of a tired weapon master”
"Drizzt has gone” growled Malice.
The news slapped Zak like a wet rag. He straightened, and
the teasing smile disappeared from his face.
"He left the house against my commands” Malice went on.
Zak relaxed visibly; when Malice announced that Drizzt
was gone, Zak had first thought that she and her devious cohorts
had driven him out or killed him.
"A spirited boy” Zak remarked. "Surely he will return
soon”
"Spirited” Malice echoed, and her tone did not put the description
in a positive light.
"He will return” Zak said again. "There's no need for our
alarm, for such extreme measures” He glared at Briza,
though he knew well that the matron mother had called
him to audience to do more than tell him of Drizzt's departure.
"The secondboy disobeyed the matron mother” Briza
snarled, a rehearsed interruption.
"Spirited” Zak said again, trying not to chuckle. "A minor
indiscretion”
"How often he seems to have those” Malice commented.
"Like another spirited male of House Do'Urden”
Zak bowed again, taking her words as a compliment. Malice
already had his punishment decided, if she meant to
punish him at all. His actions now, at this trial-if that's what
it was-would be of little consequence.
"The boy has displeased the Spider Queen!" Malice
growled, openly enraged and tired of Zak's sarcasm. "Even
you were not foolish enough to do that!"
A dark cloud passed across Zak's face. This meeting was
indeed serious; Drizzt's life could be at stake.
"But you know of his crime” Malice continued, easing
back again. She liked that she had Zak concerned and on the
defensive. She had found his vulnerable spot. It was her
turn to tease.
"Leaving the house?" Zak protested. "A minor error in
judgment. Lloth would not be concerned with such a trifle
issue”
"Do not feign ignorance, Zaknafein. You know that the elven
child lives!"
Zak lost his breath in a sharp gasp. Malice knew! Damn it
all, Lloth knew!
"We are about to go to war” Malice continued calmly, "we
are not in Lloth's favor, and we must correct the situation”
She eyed Zak directly. "You are aware of our ways and know
that we must do this”
Zak nodded, trapped. Anything he did now to disagree
would only make matters worse for Drizzt-if matters
could be worse for Drizzt.
"The secondboy must be punished” Briza said.
Another rehearsed interruption, Zak knew. He wondered
how many times Briza and Malice had practiced this
encounter.
"Am I to punish him, then?" Zak asked. "I'll not whip the
boy; that is not my place”
"His punishment is none of your concern” Malice said.
"Then why disturb my slumber?" Zak asked, trying to detach
himself from Drizzt's predicament, more for Drizzt's
sake than his own.
"I thought that you would wish to know” Malice replied.
"You and Drizzt became so close this day in the gym. Father
and son”
She saw! Zak realized. Malice, and probably that
wretched Briza, had watched the whole encounter! Zak's
head drooped as he came to know that he had unwittingly
played a part in Drizzt's predicament.
"An elven child lives” Malice began slowly, rolling out
each word in dramatic clarity, "and a young drow must die”
"No!" The word came out of Zak before he realized he was
speaking. He tried to find some escape. "Drizzt was young.
He did not understand. . . "
"He knew exactly what he was doing!" Malice screamed
back at him. "He does not regret his actions! He is so like
you, Zaknafein! So like you”
"Then he can learn” Zak reasoned. "I have not been a burden
to you, Mali-Matron Malice. You have profited by my
presence. Drizzt is no less skilled than I; he can be valuable
to us”
"Dangerous to us” Matron Malice corrected. "You and he
standing together? The thought does not please me”
"His death will aid House Hun'ett” Zak warned, grabbing
at anything he could find to defeat the matron's intent.
"The Spider Queen demands his death” Malice replied
sternly. "She must be appeased if Daermon N'a'shezbaernon
is to have any hope in its struggles against House Hun'ett”
"I beg you, do not kill the boy”
"Sympathy?" Malice mused. "It does not become a drow
warrior, Zaknafein. Have you lost your fighting will?"
"I am old, Malice”
"Matron Malice!" Briza protested, but Zak put a look on
her so cold that she lowered her snake whip before she had
even begun to put it to use.
"Older still will I become if Drizzt is put to his death”
"I do not desire this either” Malice agreed, but Zak recognized
her lie. She didn't care about Drizzt, or about anything
else, beyond gaining the Spider Queen's favor.
"Yet I see no alternative. Drizzt has angered Lloth, and she
must be appeased before our war”
Zak began to understand. This meeting wasn't about
Drizzt at all. "Take me in the boy's stead” he said.
Malice's narrow grin could not hide her feigned surprise.
This was what she had desired from the very beginning.
"You are a proven fighter” the matron argued. "Your
value, as you yourself have already admitted, cannot be underestimated.
To sacrifice you to the Spider Queen would
appease her, but what void will be left in House Do'Urden in
the wake of your passing?"
" A void that Drizzt can fill” Zak replied. He secretly hoped
that Drizzt, unlike he, would find some escape from it all,
some way around Matron Malice's evil plots.
"You are certain of this?"
"He is my equal in battle” Zak assured her. "He will grow
stronger, too, beyond what Zaknafein has ever attained”
"You are willing to do this for him?" Malice sneered, eager
drool edging her mouth.
"You know that I am” Zak replied.
"Ever the fool” Malice put in.
"To your dismay” Zak continued, undaunted, "you know
that Drizzt would do the same for me”
"He is young” Malice purred. "He will be taught better”
"As you taught me?" snapped Zak.
Malice's victorious grin became a grimace. "I warn you,
Zaknafein; she growled in all her vile rage. "If you do any.
thing to disrupt the ceremony to appease the Spider Queen,
if, in the end of your wasted life, you choose to anger me
one final time, I will give Drizzt to Briza. She and her torturous
toys will give him to Lloth!"
Unafraid, Zak held his head high. "I have offered myself,
Malice” he spat. "Have your fun while you may. In the end,
Zaknafein will be at peace; Matron Malice Do'Urden will
ever be at war!"
Shaking in anger, the moment of triumph stolen by a few
simple words, Malice could only whisper, "Take him!"
Zak offered no resistance as Vierna and Maya tied him to
the spider-shaped altar in the chapel. He watched Vierna
mostly, seeing an edge of sympathy rimming her quiet eyes.
She, too, might have been like him, but whatever hope he
had for that possibility had been buried long ago under the
relentless preaching of the Spider Queen.
"You are sad” Zak remarked to her.
Vierna straightened and tugged tightly on one of Zak's
bonds, causing him to grimace in pain. "A pity” she replied
as coldly as she could. "House Do'Urden must give much to
repay Drizzt's foolish deed. I would have enjoyed watching
the two of you together in battle”
"House Hun'ett would not have enjoyed the sight” Zak replied
with a wink. "Cry not, . .. my daughter”
Vierna slapped him across the face. "Take your lies to your
grave! "
"Deny it as you choose, Vierna” was all that Zak cared to
reply.
Vierna and Maya backed away from the altar. Vierna
fought to hold her scowl and Maya bit back an amused
chuckle, as Matron Malice and Briza entered the room. The
matron mother wore her greatest ceremonial robe, black
and weblike, clinging and floating about her all at once, and
Briza carried a sacred coffer.
Zak paid them no heed as they began their ritual, chant.
ing for the Spider Queen, offering their hopes for appeasement.
Zak had his own hopes at that moment.
"Beat them all” he whispered under his breath. "Do more
than survive, my son, as I have survived. Live! Be true to the
callings in your heart”
Braziers roared to life; the room glowed. Zak felt the heat,
knew that contact to that darker plane had been achieved.
"Take this. . . " he heard Matron Malice chant, but he put
the words out of his thoughts and continued the final prayers
of his life.
The spider-shaped dagger hovered over his chest. Malice
clenched the instrument in her bony hands, the sheen of
her sweat-soaked skin catching the orange reflection of the
fires in a surrealistic glow.
Surreal, like the transition from life to death.
Chapter 28
Rightful Owner
How long had it been? An hour? Two? Masoj paced the
length of the gap between the two stalagmite mounds just a
few feet from the entrance to the tunnel that Drizzt, and
then Guenhwyvar, had taken. "The cat should have returned
by now” the wizard grumbled, at the end of his pa.
tience.
Relief flooded through his face a moment later, when
Guenhwyvar's great black head peered around the edge of
the tunnel, behind one of the displacer beast statue guard.
ians. The fur around the cat's maw was conspicuously wet
with fresh blood.
"It is done?" Masoj asked, barely able to contain a shout of
elation. "Drizzt Do'Urden is dead?"
"Hardly” came the reply. Drizzt, for all his idealism, had to
admit a tinge of pleasure as a cloud of dread cooled the
elated fires in the sinister wizard's cheeks.
"What is this, Guenhwyvar?" Masoj demanded. "Do as I
bid you! Kill him now!"
Guenhwyvar stared blankly at Masoj, then lay at Drizzt's
feet.
"You admit your attempt on my life?" Drizzt asked.
Masoj measured the distance to his adversary-ten feet.
He might be able to get off one spell. Perhaps. Masoj had
seen Drizzt move, quick and sure, and had little desire to .
chance the attack if he could find another way out of this
predicament. Drizzt had not yet drawn a weapon, though
the young warrior's hands rested easily across the hilts of
his deadly blades.
"I understand” Drizzt continued calmly. "House Hun'ett
and House Do'Urden are to battle”
"How did you know?" Masoj blurted without thinking, too
shocked by the revelation to consider that Drizzt might
merely be goading him into a larger admission.
"I know much but care little” Drizzt replied. "House
Hun'ett wishes to wage war against my family. For what reason,
I cannot guess”
"For the vengeance of House DeVir!" came a reply from a
different direction.
Alton, standing on the side of a stalagmite mound, looked
down at Drizzt.
A smile spread over Masoj's face. The odds had so quickly
changed.
"House Hun'ett cares not at all for House DeVir” Drizzt replied,
still composed in the face of this new development. "I
have learned enough of the ways of our people to know that
the fate of one house is not the concern of another”
"But it is my concern" Alton cried, and he threw back the
cowl of his hood, revealing the hideous face, scarred by acid
for the sake of a disguise. "I am Alton DeVir, lone survivor of
House DeVir! House Do'Urden will die for its crimes against
my family, starting with you”
"I was not even born when the battle took place” Drizzt
protested.
"Of little consequence!" Alton snarled. "You are a Do'Urden,
a filthy Do'Urden. That is all that matters”
Masoj tossed the onyx figurine to the ground. "Guenhwyvar!"
he commanded. "Be gone!"
The cat looked over its shoulder to Drizzt, who nodded
his approval.
"Be gone!" Masoj cried again. "I am your master! You cannot
disobey me!"
"You do not own the cat” Drizzt said calmly.
"Who does, then?" Masoj snapped. "You?"
"Guenhwyvar” Drizzt replied. "Only Guenhwyvar. I
would think that a wizard would have a better understanding
of the magic around him”
With a low growl that might have been a mocking laugh,
Guenhwyvar loped across the stone to the figurine and dissipated
into smoky nothingness.
The cat walked down the length of the planar tunnel, toward
its home in the Astral Plane. Ever before had
Guenhwyvar been anxious to make this journey, to escape
the foul commands of its drow masters. This time, though,
the cat hesitated with every stride, looking back over its
shoulder to the dot of darkness that was Menzoberranzan.
"Will you deal?" Drizzt offered.
"You are in no position to bargain” Alton laughed, drawing
out the slender wand that Matron SiNafay had given
him.
Masoj cut him short. "Wait” he said. "Perhaps Drizzt will
prove valuable to our struggle against House Do'Urden” He
eyed the young warrior directly. "You will betray your family?"
"Hardly” Drizzt snickered. " As I have already said to you, I
care little for the coming conflict. Let House Hun'ett and
House Do'Urden both be damned, as surely they will! My
concerns are personal”
"You must have something to offer us in exchange for
your gain” Masoj explained. "Otherwise, what bargain can
you hope to make?"
"I do have something to give to you in return” Drizzt replied,
his voice calm, "your lives”
Masoj and Alton looked to each other and laughed aloud,
but there was a trace of nervousness in their chuckles.
"Give me the figurine, Masoj” Drizzt continued, undaunted.
"Guenhwyvar never belonged to you and will
serve you no more”
Masoj stopped laughing.
"In return” Drizzt went on before the wizard could reply,
"I will leave House Do'Urden and not take part in the battle”
"Corpses do not fight” Alton sneered.
"I will take another Do'Urden with me” Drizzt spat at him.
" A weapon master. Surely House Hun'ett will have gained an
advantage if both Drizzt and Zaknafein-"
"Silence!" Masoj screamed. "The cat is mine! I do not need
any bargains from a pitiful Do'Urden! You are dead, fool,
and House Do'Urden's weapon master will follow you to
your grave!"
"Guenhwyvar is free!" Drizzt growled.
The scimitars came out in Drizzt's hands. He had never really
fought a wizard before, let alone two, but he remembered
vividly from past encounters the sting of their spells.
Masoj had already begun to cast, but of more concern was
Alton, out of quick reach and pointing that slender wand.
Before Drizzt ever decided his course of action, the issue
was settled for him. A cloud of smoke engulfed Masoj and
he fell back, his spell disrupted with the shock.
Guenhwyvar was back.
Alton was out of Drizzt's reach. Drizzt could not hope to
get to the wizard before the wand went off, but to
Guenhwyvar's streamlined feline muscles, the distance was
not so great. Hind legs tamped a footing and snapped,
launching the hunting panther through the air.
Alton brought the wand to bear on this new nemesis in
time and released a mighty bolt, scorching Guenhwyvar's
chest. Greater strength than a single bolt, though, would be
needed to deter the ferocious panther. Stunned but still
fighting, Guenhwyvar slammed into the faceless wizard,
dropping him off the back side of the stalagmite mound.
The lightning bolt's flash stunned Drizzt as well, but he
continued to pursue Masoj and could only hope that
Guenhwyvar had survived. He rushed around the base of
the other stalagmite mound and came face-to-face with Masoj,
once again in the act of spellcasting. Drizzt didn't slow;
he ducked his head and barreled into his opponent, his
scimitars leading the way.
He slipped right through his opponent-right through the
image of his opponent!
Drizzt crashed heavily into the stone and rolled aside, trying
to escape the magical attack he knew was coming.
This time, Masoj, standing fully thirty feet behind the projection
of his image, was taking no chances with a miss. He
launched a volley of magical missiles of energy that veered
unerringly to intercept the dodging fighter. They slammed
into Drizzt, jolting him, bruising him under his skin.
But Drizzt was able to shake away the numbing pain and
regain his footing. He knew where the real Masoj was standing
now and had no intention of letting the trickster out of
sight again.
A dagger in his hand, Masoj watched Drizzt's stalking approach.
Drizzt didn't understand. Why wasn't the wizard preparing
another spell? The fall had reopened the wound in
Drizzt's shoulder, and the magical bolts had torn his side
and a leg. The wounds were not serious, though, and Masoj
had no chance against him in physical combat.
The wizard stood before him, unconcerned, dagger
drawn and a wicked smile on his face.
Face down on the hard stone, Alton felt the warmth of his
own blood running freely between the melted holes that
were his eyes. The cat was higher up the side of the mound,
not yet fully recovered from the lightning bolt.
Alton forced himself up and raised his wand for a second
strike. .. but the wand had snapped in half.
Frantically Alton recovered the other piece and held it up
before his disbelieving eyes. Guenhwyvar was coming
again, but Alton didn't notice.
The glowing ends of the wand, a power building within
the magical stick, enthralled him. "You cannot do that” Alton
whispered in protest.
Guenhwyvar leaped just as the broken wand exploded.
A ball of fire roared up into Menzoberranzan's night,
chunks of rubble rocketed off the great cavern's eastern
wall and ceiling, and both Drizzt and Masoj were knocked
from their feet.
"Now Guenhwyvar belongs to no one}' Masoj sneered,
tossing the figurine to the ground.
"No DeVir remains to claim vengeance on House Do'Urden”
Drizzt growled back, his anger holding off his despair.
Masoj became the focus of that anger, and the wizard's
mocking laughter led Drizzt toward him in a furious rush.
Just as Drizzt got in range, Masoj snapped his fingers and
was gone.
"Invisible” Drizzt roared, slicing futilely at the empty air
before him. His exertions took the edge from his blind rage
and he realized that Masoj was no longer in front of him.
How foolish he must seem to the wizard. How vulnerable!
Drizzt crouched to listen. He sensed a distant chanting
from up above, on the cavern wall.
Drizzt's instincts told him to dive to the side, but his new
understanding of wizards told him that Masoj would anticipate
such a move. Drizzt feigned to the left and heard the
climactic words of the building spell. As the lightning blast
thundered harmlessly to the side, Drizzt sprinted straight
ahead, hoping his vision would return in time for him to get
to the wizard.
"Damn you!" Masoj cried, understanding the feint as soon
as he had errantly fired. Rage became terror in the next instant,
as Masoj caught sight of Drizzt, sprinting across the
stone, leaping the rubble, and crossing the sides of the
mounds with all the grace of a hunting cat.
Masoj fumbled in his pockets for the components to his
next spell. He had to be quick. He was fully twenty feet from
the cavern floor, perched on a narrow ledge, but Drizzt was
moving fast, impossibly fast!
The ground beneath him did not register in Drizzt's conscious
thoughts. The cavern wall would have seemed unclimbable
to him in a more rational state, but now he gave it
not a care. Guenhwyvar was lost to him. Guenhwyvar was
gone.
That wicked wizard on the ledge, that embodiment of demonic
evil, had caused it. Drizzt sprang to the wall, found
one hand free-he must have discarded one scimitar-and
caught a tenuous hold. It wasn't enough for a rational drow,
but Drizzt's mind ignored the protests of the muscles in his
straining fingers. He had only ten feet to go.
Another volley of energy bolts thudded into Drizzt, hammering
the top of his head in rapid succession.
"How many spells remain, wizard?" he heard himself defiantly
cry as he ignored the pain.
Masoj fell back when Drizzt looked up at him, when the
burning light of those lavender orbs fell upon him like a pronouncement
of doom. He had seen Drizzt in battle many
times, and the sight of the fighting young warrior had
haunted him through all the planning of this assassination.
But Masoj had never seen Drizzt enraged before. If he
had, he never would have agreed to try to kill Drizzt. If he
had, he would have told Matron SiNafay to go sit on a stalagmite.
What spell was next? What spell could slow the monster
that was Drizzt Do'Urden?
A hand, glowing with the heat of anger, grabbed the lip of
the ledge. Masoj stomped on it with the heel of his boot. The
fingers were broken-the wizard knew that the fingers
were broken-but Drizzt, impossibly, was up beside him
and the blade of a scimitar was through the wizard's ribs.
"The fingers are broken!" the dying mage gasped in protest.
Drizzt looked down at his hand and realized the pain for
the first time. "Perhaps” he said absently, "but they will
heal”
Drizzt, limping, found his other scimitar and cautiously
picked his way over the rubble of one of the mounds. Fighting
the fear within his broken heart, he forced himself to
peer over the crest at the destruction. The back side of the
mound glowed eerily in the residual heat, a beacon for the
awakening city.
So much for stealth. .
Pieces of Alton DeVir lay scattered at the bottom, around
the wizard's smoldering robes. "Have you found peace,
Faceless One?" Drizzt whispered, exhaling the last of his anger.
He remembered the assault Alton had launched against
him those years ago in the Academy. The faceless master
and Masoj had explained it away as a test for a budding warrior.
"How long you have carried your hate” Drizzt muttered
at the blasted bits of corpse.
But Alton DeVir was not his concern now. He scanned the
rest of the rubble, looking for some clue to GuenhwyYar's
fate, not certain how a magical creature would fare in such
a disaster. Not a sign of the cat remained, nothing that
would even hmt that GuenhwyYar had ever been there.
Drizzt consciously reminded himself that there was no
hope, but the anxious spring in his steps mocked his stern
visage. He rushed back down the mound and around the
other stalagmite, where Masoj and he had been when the
wand exploded. He spotted the onyx figurine immediately.
He lifted it gently in his hands. It was warm, as though it,
too, had been caught in the blast, and Drizzt could sense
that its magic had diminished. Drizzt wanted to call the cat,
then, but he didn't dare, knowing that the travel between
the planes heavily taxed GuenhwyYar. If the cat had been injured,
Drizzt figured that it would be better to give it some
time to recuperate.
"Oh, Guenhwyvar” he moaned, "my friend, my brave
friend” He dropped the figurine into his pocket.
He could only hope that Guenhwyvar had survived.
Chapter 29
Alone
Drizzt walked back around the stalagmite, back to the
body of Masoj Hun'ett. He had had no choice but to kill his
adversary; Masoj had drawn the battle lines.
That fact did little to dispel the guilt in Drizzt as he looked
upon the corpse. He had killed another drow, had taken the
life of one of his own people. Was he trapped, as Zaknafein
had been trapped for so very many years, in a cycle of violence
that would know no end?
"Never again” Drizzt vowed to the corpse. "Never again
will I kill a drow elf”
He turned away, disgusted, and knew as soon as he looked
back to the silent, sinister mounds of the vast draw city that
he would not survive long in Menzoberranzan if he held to
that promise.
A thousand possibilities whirled in Drizzt's mind as he
made his way through the winding ways of Menzoberranzan.
He pushed the thoughts aside, stopped them from dulling
his alertness. The light was general now in Narbondel;
the drow day was beginning, and activity had started from
every corner of the city. In the world of the surfacedwellers,
the day was the safer time, when light exposed assassins.
In Menzoberranzan's eternal darkness, the daytime
of the dark elves was even more dangerous than the night.
Drizzt picked his way carefully, rolling wide from the
mushroom fence of the noblest houses, wherein lay House
Hun'ett. He encountered no more adversaries and made the
safety of the Do'Urden compound a short time later. He
rushed through the gate and by the surprised soldiers without
a word of explanation and shoved aside the guards below
the balcony.
The house was strangely quiet; Drizzt would have expected
them all to be up and about with battle imminent. He
gave the eerie stillness no more thought, and he cut a
straight line to the training gym and Zaknafein's private
quarters.
Drizzt paused outside the gym's stone door, his hand
tightly clenched on the handle of the portal. What would he
propose to his father? That they leave? He and Zaknafein on
the perilous trails of the Underdark, fighting when they
must and escaping the burdensome guilt of their existence
under drow rule? Drizzt liked the thought, but he wasn't so
certain now, standing before the door, that he could convince
Zak to follow such a course. Zak could have left before,
at any time during the centuries of his life, but when
Drizzt had asked him why he had remained, the heat had
drained from the weapon master's face. Were they indeed
trapped in the life offered to them by Matron Malice and
her evil cohorts?
Drizzt grimaced away the worries; no sense in arguing to
himself with Zak only a few steps away.
The training gym was as quiet as the rest of the house. Tho
quiet. Drizzt hadn't expected Zak to be there, but something
more than his father was absent. The father's presence,
too, was gone.
Drizzt knew that something was wrong, and each step he
took toward Zak's private door quickened until he was in
full flight. He burst in without.a knock, not surprised to find
the bed empty.
"Malice must have sent him out in search of me” Drizzt
reasoned. "Damn, I have caused him trouble!" He turned to
leave, but something caught his eye and held him in the
room-Zak's sword belt.
Never would the weapon master have left his room, not
even for functions within the safety of House Do'Urden,
without his swords. "Your weapon is your most trusted
companion” Zak had told Drizzt a thousand times. "Keep it
ever at your side!"
"House Hun'ett?" Drizzt whispered, wondering if the rival
house had magically attacked in the night, while he was out
battling Alton and Masoj. The compound, though, was se.
rene; surely the soldiers would have known if anything like
that had occurred.
Drizzt picked up the belt for inspection. No blood, and the
clasp neatly unbuckled. No enemy had torn this from Zak.
The weapon master's pouch lay beside it, also intact.
"What, then?" Drizzt asked aloud. He replaced the sword
belt beside the bed, but slung the pouch across his neck,
and turned, not knowing where he should go next.
He had to see about the rest of the family, he realized be- I
fore he had even stepped through the door. Perhaps then
this riddle about Zak would become more clear.
Dread grew out of that thought as Drizzt headed down
the long and decorated corridor to the chapel anteroom.
Had Malice, or any of them, brought Zak harm? For what,
purpose? The notion seemed illogical to Drizzt, but it i
nagged him every step, as if some sixth sense were warning
him.
There still was no sign of anyone.
The anteroom's ornate doors swung in, magically and silently,
even as Drizzt raised his hand to knock on them. He
saw the matron mother first, sitting smugly on her throne
at the rear of the room, her smile inviting.
Drizzt's discomfort did not diminish when he entered.
The whole family was there: Briza, Vierna, and Maya to the
sides of their matron, Rizzen and Dinin unobtrusively
standing beside the left wall. The whole family. Except for
Zak.
Matron Malice studied her son carefully, noting his many
wounds. "I instructed you not to leave the house” she said to
Drizzt, but she was not scolding him. "Where did your travels
take you?"
"Where is Zaknafein?" Drizzt asked in reply.
"Answer the matron mother!" Briza yelled at him, her
snake whip prominently displayed on her belt.
Drizzt glared at her and she recoiled, feeling the same bitter
chill that Zaknafein had cast over her earlier in the
night.
"I instructed you not to leave the house” Malice said again,
still holding calm. "Why did you disobey me?"
"I had matters to attend” Drizzt replied, "urgent matters. I
did not wish to bother you with them”
"War is upon us, my son” Matron Malice explained. "You
are vulnerable out in the city by yourself. House Do'Urden
cannot afford to lose you now”
"My business had to be handled alone” Drizzt answered.
"Is it completed?"
"It is”
"Then I trust that you will not disobey me again” The
words came calm and even, but Drizzt understood at once
the severity of the threat behind them.
"To other matters, then” Malice went on.
"Where is Zaknafein?" Drizzt dared to ask again.
Briza mumbled some curse under her breath and pulled
the whip from her belt. Matron Malice threw an outstretched
hand in her direction to stay her. They needed
tact, not brutality, to bring Drizzt under control at this critical
time. There would be ample opportunities for punishment
after House Hun'ett was properly defeated.
"Concern yourself not with the fate of the weapon master”
Malice replied. "He works for the good of House Do'Urden
even as we speak-on a personal mission”
Drizzt didn't believe a word of it. Zak would never have
left without his weapons. The truth hovered about Drizzt's
thoughts, but he wouldn't let it in.
"Our concern is House Hun'ett” Malice went on, addressing
them all. "The war's first strikes may fall this day”
"The first strikes already have fallen” Drizzt interrupted.
All eyes came back to him, to his wounds. He wanted to continue
the discussion about Zak but knew that he would only
get himself, and Zak, if Zak was still alive, into further trouble.
Perhaps the conversation would bring him more clues.
"You have seen battle?" Malice asked.
"You know of the Faceless One?" Drizzt asked.
"Master of the Academy” Dinin answered, "of Sorcere.
have dealt with him often”
"He has been of use to us in the past” said Malice, "but no
more, I believe. He is a Hun'ett, Gelroos Hun'ett”
"No” Drizzt replied. "Once he may have been, but Alton
DeVir is his name. .. was his name”
"The link!" Dinin growled, suddenly comprehending.
"Gelroos was to kill Alton on the night of House DeVir's fall!
"It would seem that Alton DeVir proved the stronger”
mused Malice, and all became clear to her. "Matron SiNafay
Hun'ett accepted him, used him to her gain” she explained
to her family. She looked back to Drizzt. "You battled with
him?"
"He is dead” Drizzt answered.
Matron Malice cackled with delight.
"One less wizard to deal with” Briza remarked, replacing
the whip on her belt.
"Two” Drizzt corrected, but there was no boasting in his
voice. He was not proud of his actions. "Masoj Hun'ett is no
more”
"My son!" Matron Malice cried. "You have brought us a
great edge-in this war!" She glanced all about her family, in.
fecting them, except Drizzt, with her elation. "House
Hun'ett may not even choose to strike us now, knowing its
disadvantage. We will not let them get away! We will
destroy them this day and become the Eighth House of
Menzoberranzan! Woe to the enemies of Daermon N'a'shez.
baernon!
"We must move at once, my family” Malice reasoned, her
hands rubbing over each other in excitement. "We cannot
wait for an attack. We must take the offensive! Alton DeVir
is gone now; the link that justifies this war is no more.
Surely the ruling council knew of Hun'ett's intentions, and
with both her wizards dead and the element of surprise
lost, Matron SiNafay will move quickly to stop the battle”
Drizzt's hand unconsciously slipped into Zak's pouch
the others joined Malice in her plotting.
"Where is Zak?" Drizzt demanded again, above the chorus.
Silence dropped as quickly as the tumult had begun.
"He is of no concern to you, my son” Malice said to him,
still keeping to her tact despite Drizzt's impudence. "You are
the weapon master of House Do'Urden now. Lloth has forgiven
your insolence; you have no crimes weighing against
you. Your career may begin anew, to glorious heights!"
Her words cut through Drizzt as surely as his own scimitar
might. "You killed him” he whispered aloud, the truth
too awful to be contained in silent thought.
The matron's face suddenly gleamed, hot with rage. "You
killed him!" she shot back at Drizzt. "Your insolence demanded
repayment to the Spider Queen!"
Drizzt's tongue got all tangled up behind his teeth.
"But you live” Malice went on, relaxing again in her chair,
'as the elven child lives!'
Dinin was not the only one in the room to gasp audibly.
"Yes, we know of your deception” Malice sneered. "The
Spider Queen always knew. She demanded restitution!'
"You sacrificed Zaknafein?" Drizzt breathed, hardly able
to get the words out of his mouth. "You gave him to that
damned Spider Queen?"
"I would watch how I spoke of Queen Lloth” Malice
warned. "Forget Zaknafein. He is not your concern. Look to
your own life, my warrior son. All glories are offered to
you, a station of honor!'
Drizzt was indeed looking to his own life at that moment;
at the proposed path that offered him a life of battle, a life of
killing drow.
"You have no options” Malice said to him, seeing his inward
struggle. "I offer to you now your life. In exchange,
you must do as I bid, as Zaknafein once did!'
"You kept your bargain with him” Drizzt spat sarcastically.
"I did!" Matron Malice protested. "Zaknafein went willingly
to the altar, for your sake!"
Her words stung Drizzt for only a moment. He would not
accept the guilt for Zaknafein's death! He had followed the
only course he could, on the surface against the elves and
here in the evil city.
"My offer is a good one” Malice said. "I give it here, before
all the family. Both of us will benefit from the agreement, . . .
Weapon Master?"
A smile spread across Drizzt's face when he looked into
Matron Malice's cold eyes, a grin that Malice took as acceptance.
"Weapon master?" Drizzt echoed. "Not likely”
Again Malice misunderstood. "I have seen you in battle”
she argued. "Two wizards! You underestimate yourself”
Drizzt nearly laughed aloud at the irony of her words.
She thought he would fail where Zaknafein had failed,
would fall into her trap as the former weapon master had
fallen, never to climb back out. "It is you who underestimate
me, Malice” Drizzt said with threatening calm.
"Matron!" Briza demanded, but she held back, seeing that
Drizzt and everyone else was ignoring her as the drama
played out.
"You ask me to serve your evil designs” Drizzt continued.
He knew but didn't care that all of them were nervously fingering
weapons or preparing spells, were waiting for the
proper moment to strike the blasphemous fool dead. Those
childhood memories of the agony of snake whips reminded
him of the punishment for his actions. Drizzt's fingers
closed around a circular object, adding to his courage,
though he would have contii1ued in any case.
"They are a lie, as our-no, your-people are a lie!"
"Your skin is as dark as mine” Malice reminded him. "You
are a drow, though you have never learned what that
means!"
"Oh, I do know what it means”
"Then act by the rules!" Matron Malice demanded.
"Your rules?" Drizzt growled back. "But your rules are a
damned lie as well, as great a lie as that filthy spider you
claim as a deity!"
"Insolent slug!" Briza cried, raising her snake whip.
Drizzt struck first. He pulled the object, the tiny ceramic
globe, from Zaknafein's pouch.
"A true god damn you all!" he cried as he slammed the ball
to the stone floor. He snapped his eyes shut as the pebble
within the ball, enchanted by a powerful light-emanating
dweomer, exploded into the room and erupted into his kin's
sensitive eyes. "And damn that Spider Queen as well!"
Malice reeled backward, taking her great throne right
over in a heavy crash to the hard stone. Cries of agony and
rage came from every corner of the room as the sudden
light bored into the stunned drow. Finally Vierna managed
to launch a countering spell and returned the room to its
customary gloom.
"Get him!" Malice growled, still trying to shake off the
heavy fall. "I want him dead!"
The others had hardly recovered enough to heed to her
commands, and Dmzt was already out of the house.
Carried on the silent winds of the Astral Plane, the call
came. The entity of the panther stood up, ignoring its pains,
and took note of the voice, a familiar, comforting voice.
The cat was off, then, running with all its heart and
strength to answer the summons of its new master.
A short while later, Drizzt crept out of a little tunnel,
Guenhwyvar at his side, and moved through the courtyard
of the Academy to look down upon Menzoberranzan for
the last time.
"What place is this” Drizzt asked the cat quietly, "that I call
home? These are my people, by skin and by heritage, but I
am no kin to them. They are lost and ever will be.
"How many others are like me, I wonder?" Drizzt whispered,
taking one final look. "Doomed souls, as was Zaknafein,
poor Zak. I do this for him, Guenhwyvar; I leave as he
could not. His life has been my lesson, a dark scroll etched
by the heavy price exacted by Matron Malice's evil promises.
"Good-bye, Zak" he cried, his voice rising in final defi.
ance. "My father. 'Take heart, as do I, that when we meet
again, in a life after this, it will surely not be in the hellfire
our kin are doomed to endure!"
Drizzt motioned the cat back into the tunnel, the entrance
to the untamed Underdark. Watching the cat's easy movements,
Drizzt realized again how fortunate he was to have
found a companion of like spirit, a true friend. The way
would not be easy for him and Guenhwyvar beyond the
guarded borders of Menzoberranzan. They would be unprotected
and alone-though better off, by Drizzt's
estimation-more than they ever could be amid the evilness
of the drow.
Drizzt stepped into the tunnel behind Guenhwyvar and
left Menzoberranzan behind.
Exile
By R.A. Salvatore
PRELUDE
The monster lumbered along the quiet corridors of the Underdark, its eight scaly
legs occasionally scuffing the stone. It did not recoil at its own echoing sounds,
fearing the revealing noise. Nor did it scurry for cover, expecting the rush of
another predator. For even in the dangers of the Underdark, this creature knew
only security, confident of its ability to defeat any foe. Its breath reeked of deadly
poison, the hard edges of its claws dug deep gouges into solid stone, and the
rows of spearlike teeth that lined its wicked maw could fear through the thickest
of hides. But worst of all was the monster's gaze, the gaze of a basilisk, which
could transmutate into solid stone any living thing it fell upon.
This creature, huge and terrible, was among the greatest of its kind. It did not
know fear.
The hunter watched the basilisk pass as he had watched it earlier that same day.
The eight legged monster was the intruder here, coming into the hunter's domain.
He had witnessed the basilisk kill several of his rothe, the small, cattlelike
creatures that enhanced his table with its poison breath, and the rest of the herd
had fled blindly down the endless tunnels, perhaps never to return.
The hunter was angry.
He watched now as the monster trudged down the narrow passageway, just the
route the hunter had suspected it would take. He slid his weapons from their
sheaths, gaining confidence, as always, as soon as he felt their fine balance. The
hunter had owned them since his childhood, and even after nearly three decades
of almost constant use, they bore only the slightest hints of wear. Now they
would be tested again.
The hunter replaced his weapons and waited for the sound that would spur him
to motion. A throaty growl stopped the basilisk in its tracks. The monster peered
ahead curiously, though its poor eyes could distinguish little beyond a few feet.
Again came the growl, and the basilisk hunched down, waiting for the challenger,
its next victim, to spring out and die.
Far behind, the hunter came out of his cubby, running impossibly fast along the
tiny cracks and spurs in the corridor walls. In his magical cloak, his piwafwi, he
was invisible against the stone, and with his agile and practiced movements, he
made not a sound.
He came impossibly silent, impossibly fast.
The growl issued again from ahead of the basilisk but had not come any closer.
The impatient monster shuffled forward, anxious to get on with the killing. When
the basilisk crossed under a low archway, an impenetrable globe of absolute
darkness enveloped its head and the monster stopped suddenly and took a step
back, as the hunter knew it would.
The hunter was upon it then. He leaped from the passage wall, executing three
separate actions before he ever reached his mark. First he cast a simple spell,
which lined the basilisk's head in glowing blue and purple flames. Next he pulled
his hood down over his face, for he did not need his eyes in battle, and against a
basilisk a stray gaze could only bring him doom. Then, drawing his deadly
scimitars, he landed on the monster's back and ran up its scales to get to its
head.
The basilisk reacted as soon as the dancing flames outlined its head. They did
not burn, but their outline made the monster an easy target. The basilisk spun
back, but before its head had turned halfway, the first scimitar had dived into one
of its eyes. The creature reared and thrashed, trying to get at the hunter. It
breathed its noxious fumes and whipped its head about.
The hunter was the faster. He kept behind the maw, out of death's way. His
second scimitar found the basilisk's other eye, then the hunter unleashed his
fury. The basilisk was the intruder, it had killed his rothe! Blow after savage blow
bashed into the monster's armored head, flecked off scales, and dived for the
flesh beneath.
The basilisk understood its peril but still believed that it would win. It had always
won. If it could only get its poisonous breath in line with the furious hunter.
The second foe, the growling feline foe, was upon the basilisk then, having
sprung toward the flame-lined maw without fear. The great cat latched on and
took no notice of the poisonous fumes, for it was a magical beast, impervious to
such attacks. Panther claws dug deep lines into the basilisk's gums, letting the
monster drink of its own blood.
Behind the huge head, the hunter struck again and again, a hundred times and
more. Savagely, viciously, the scimitars slammed through the scaly armor,
through the flesh, and through the skull, battering the basilisk down into the
blackness of death.
Long after the monster lay still, the pounding of the bloodied scimitars slowed.
The hunter removed his hood and inspected the broken pile of gore at his feet
and the hot stains of blood on his blades. He raised the dripping scimitars into
the air and proclaimed his victory with a scream of primal exultation.
He was the hunter and this was his home!
When he had thrown all of his rage out in that scream, though, the hunter looked
upon his companion and was ashamed. The panther's saucer eyes judged him,
even if the panther did not. The cat was the hunter's only link to the past, to the
civilized existence the hunter once had known.
"Come, Guenhwyvar," he whispered as he slid the scimitars back into their
sheaths. He reveled in the sound of the words as he spoke them. It was the only
voice he had heard for a decade. But every time he spoke now, the words
seemed more foreign and came to him with difficulty. Would he lose that ability,
too, as he had lost every other aspect of his former existence? This the hunter
feared greatly, for without his voice, he could not summon the panther.
He then truly would be alone.
Down the quiet corridors of the Underdark went the hunter and his cat, making
not a sound, disturbing no rubble. Together they had come to know the dangers
of this hushed world. Together they had learned to survive. Despite the victory,
though, the hunter wore no smile this day. He feared no foes, but was no longer
certain whether his courage came from confidence or from apathy about living.
Perhaps survival was not enough.
PART 1
THE HUNTER
I remember vividly the day I walked away from the city of my birth, the city of my
people. All the Underdark lay before me, a life of adventure and excitement, with
possibilities that lifted my heart. More than that, though, I left Menzoberranzan
with the belief that I could now live my life in accordance with my principles. I had
Guenhwyvar on my side and my scimitars belted on my hips. My future was my
own to determine.
But that drow, the young Drizzt Do'Urden who walked out of Menzoberranzan on
that fated day, barely into my fourth decade of life, could not begin to understand
the truth of time, of how its passage seemed to slow when the moments were not
shared with others. In my youthful exuberance, I looked forward to several
centuries of life.
How do you measure centuries when a single hour seems a day and a single day
seems a year?
Beyond the cities of the Underdark, there is food for those who know how to find
it and safety for those who know how to hide. More than anything else, though,
beyond the teeming cities of the Underdark, there is solitude.
As I became a creature of the empty tunnels, survival became easier and more
difficult all at once. I gained in the physical skills and experience necessary to live
on. I could defeat almost anything that wandered into my chosen domain, and
those few monsters that I could not defeat, I could surely flee or hide from. It did
not take me long, however, to discover one nemesis that I could neither defeat
nor flee. It followed me wherever I went-indeed, the farther I ran, the more it
closed in around me. My enemy was solitude, the interminable, incessant silence
of hushed corridors.
Looking back on it these many years later, I find myself amazed and appalled at
the changes I endured under such an existence. The very identity of every
reasoning being is defined by the language, the communication, between that
being and others around it. Without that link, I was lost. When I left
Menzoberranzan, I determined that my life would be based on principles, my
strength adhering to unbending beliefs. Yet after only a few months alone in the
Underdark, the only purpose for my survival was my survival. I had become a
creature of instinct, calculating and cunning but not thinking, not using my mind
for anything more than directing the newest kill.
Guenhwyvar saved me, I believe. The same companion that had pulled me from
certain death in the clutches of monsters unnumbered rescued me from a death
of emptiness-less dramatic, perhaps, but no less fatal. I found myself living for
those moments - when the cat could walk by my side, when I had another living
creature to hear my words, strained though they had become. In addition to
every other value, Guenhwyvar became my time clock, for I knew that the cat
could come forth from the Astral Plane for a half-day every other day.
Only after my ordeal had ended did I realize how critical that one-quarter of my
time actually was. Without Guenhwyvar, I would not have found the resolve to
continue. I would never have maintained the strength to survive.
Even when Guenhwyvar stood beside me, I found myself growing more and
more ambivalent toward the fighting. I was secretly hoping that some denizen of
the Underdark would prove stronger than I. Could the pain of tooth or talon be
greater than the emptiness and the silence?
I think not.
-Drizzt Do'Urden
CHAPTER 1
ANNIVERSARY PRESENT
Matron Malice Do'Urden shifted uneasily on the stone throne in the small and
darkened anteroom to the great chapel of House Do'Urden. For the dark elves,
who measured time's passage in decades, this was a day to be marked in the
annals of Malice's house, the tenth anniversary of the ongoing covert conflict
between the Do'Urden family and House Hun'ett. Matron Malice, never one to
miss a celebration, had a special present prepared for her enemies.
Briza Do'Urden, Malice's eldest daughter, a large and powerful drow female,
paced about the anteroom anxiously, a not uncommon sight. "It should be
finished by now,' she grumbled as she kicked a small three-legged stool. It
skidded and tumbled, chipping away a piece of mushroom-stem seat.
"Patience, my daughter,' Malice replied somewhat recriminatory, though she
shared Briza's sentiments. "Jarlaxle is a careful one:' Briza turned away at the
mention of the outrageous mercenary and moved to the room's ornately carved
stone doors. Malice did not miss the significance of her daughter's actions.
"You do not approve of Jarlaxle and his band,' the matron mother stated flatly.
"They are houseless rogues,' Briza spat in response, still not turning to face her
mother. "There is no place in Menzoberranzan for houseless rogues. They
disrupt the natural order of our society. And they are males!"
They serve us well,' Malice reminded her. Briza wanted to argue about the
extreme cost of hiring the mercenary band, but she wisely held her tongue. She
and Malice had been at odds almost continually since the start of the Do'Urden-
Hun'ett war.
"Without Bregan D'aerthe, we could not take action against our enemies,' Malice
continued. "Using the mercenaries, the houseless rogues, as you have named
them, allows us to wage war without implicating our house as the perpetrator:'
"Then why not be done with it?" Briza demanded, spinning back toward the
throne. "We kill a few of Hun'ett's soldiers, they kill a few of ours. And all the
while, both houses continue to recruit replacements! It will not end! The only
winners in the conflict are the mercenaries of Bregan D'aerthe-and whatever
band Matron SiNafay Hun'ett has hired-feeding off the coffers of both houses!"
"Watch your tone, my daughter,' Malice growled as an angry reminder. "You are
addressing a matron mother:'
Briza turned away again. "We should have attacked House Hun'ett immediately,
on the night Zaknafein was sacrificed,' she dared to grumble.
"You forget the actions of your youngest brother on that night,' Malice replied
evenly.
But the matron mother was wrong. If she lived a thousand more years, Briza
would not forget Drizzt's actions on the night he had forsaken his family. Trained
by Zaknafein, Malice's favorite lover and reputably the finest weapon master in all
of Menzoberranzan, Drizzt had achieved a level of fighting ability far beyond the
drow norm. But Zak had also given Drizzt the troublesome and blasphemous
attitudes that Lloth, the Spider Queen deity of the dark elves, would not tolerate.
Finally, Drizzt's sacrilegious ways had invoked Lloth's wrath, and the Spider
Queen, in turn, had demanded his death.
Matron Malice, impressed by Drizzt's potential as a warrior, had acted boldly on
Drizzt's behalf and had given Zaknafein's heart to Lloth to compensate for
Drizzt's sins. She forgave Drizzt in the hope that without Zaknafein's influences
he would amend his ways and replace the deposed weapon master.
In return, though, the ungrateful Drizzt had betrayed them all, had run off into the
Underdark-an act that had not only robbed House Do'Urden of its only potential
remaining weapon master, but also had placed Matron Malice and the rest of the
Do'Urden family out of Lloth's favor. In the disastrous end of all their efforts,
House Do'Urden had lost its premier weapon master, the favor of Lloth, and its
would-be weapon master. It had not been a good day.
Luckily, House Hun'ett had suffered similar woes on that same day, losing both
its wizards in a botched attempt to assassinate Drizzt. With both houses
weakened and in Lloth's disfavor, the expected war had been turned into a
calculated series of covert raids.
Briza would never forget.
A knock on the anteroom door startled Briza and her mother from their private
memories of that fateful time.
The door swung open, and Dinin, the elderboy of the house, walked in.
"Greetings, Matron Mother,' he said in appropriate manner and dipping into a low
bow. Dinin wanted his news to be a surprise, but the grin that found its way onto
his face revealed everything.
"Jarlaxle has returnedl" Malice snarled in glee. Dinin turned toward the open
door, and the mercenary, waiting patiently in the corridor, strode in. Briza, ever
amazed at the rogue's unusual mannerisms, shook her head as Jarlaxle walked
past her. Nearly every dark elf in Menzoberranzan dressed in a quiet and
practical manner, in robes adorned with the symbols of the Spider Queen or in
supple chain-link armor under the folds of a magical and camouflaging piwafwi
cloak.
Jarlaxle, arrogant and brash, followed few of the customs of Menzoberranzan's
inhabitants. He was most certainly not the norm of drow society and he flaunted
the differences openly, brazenly. He wore not a cloak nor a robe, but a
shimmering cape that showed every color of the spectrum both in the glow of
light and in the infrared spectrum of heat -sensing eyes. The cape's magic could
only be guessed, but those closest to the mercenary leader indicated that it was
very valuable indeed.
Jarlaxle's vest was sleeveless and cut so high that his slender and tightly
muscled stomach was open for all to view. He kept a patch over one eye, though
careful observers would understand it as ornamental, for Jarlaxle often shifted it
from one eye to the other.
"My dear Briza" Jarlaxle said over his shoulder, noting the high priestess's
disdainful interest in his appearance. He spun about and bowed low, sweeping
off the wide-brimmed hat-another oddity, and even more so since the hat was
overly plumed in the monstrous feathers of a diatryma, a gigantic Underdark birdas
he stooped.
Briza huffed and turned away at the sight of the mercenary's dipping head. Drow
elves wore their thick white hair as a mantle of their station, each cut designed to
reveal rank and house affiliation. Jarlaxle the rogue wore no hair at all, and from
Briza's angle, his clean-shaven head appeared as a ball of pressed onyx.
Jarlaxle laughed quietly at the continuing disapproval of the eldest Do'Urden
daughter and turned back toward Matron Malice, his ample jewelry tinkling and
his hard and shiny boots clumping with every step. Briza took note of this as well,
for she knew that those boots, and that jewelry, only seemed to make noise
when Jarlaxle wished them to do so.
"It is done?" Matron Malice asked before the mercenary could even begin to offer
a proper greeting.
"My dear Matron Malice,' Jarlaxle replied with a pained sigh, knowing that he
could get away with the informalities in light of his grand news. "Did you doubt
me? Surely I am wounded to my heart,'
Malice leaped from her throne, her fist clenched in victory. "Dipree Hun'ett is
dead!" she proclaimed. "The first noble victim of the war!"
"You forget Masoj Hun'ett,' remarked Briza, "slain by Drizzt ten years ago.
And Zaknafein Do'Urden,' Briza had to add, against her better judgment, "killed
by your own hand."
"Zaknafein was not noble by birth:' Malice sneered at her impertinent daughter.
Briza's words stung Malice nonetheless. Malice had decided to sacrifice
Zaknafein in Drizzt's stead against Briza's recommendations.
Jarlaxle cleared his throat to deflect the growing tension. The mercenary knew
that he had to finish his business and be out of House Do'Urden as quickly as
possible. Already he knew-though the Do'Urdens did not-that the appointed hour
drew near. "There is the matter of my payment,' he reminded Malice.
"Dinin will see to it,' Malice replied with a wave of her hand, not turning her eyes
from her daughter's pernicious stare.
"I will take my leave,' Jarlaxle said, nodding to the elder boy.
Before the mercenary had taken his first step toward the door, Vierna, Malice's
second daughter, burst into the room, her face glowing brightly in the infrared
spectrum, heated with obvious excitement.
"Damn,' Jarlaxle whispered under his breath.
"What is it?" Matron Malice demanded.
"House Hun'ett,' Vierna cried. "Soldiers in the compound! We are under attack!"
Out in the courtyard, beyond the cavern complex, nearly five hundred soldiers of
House Hun'ett-fully a hundred more than the house reportedly possessedfollowed
the blast of a lightning bolt through House Do'Urden's adamantite gates.
The three hundred fifty soldiers of the Do'Urden household swarmed out of the
shaped stalagmite mounds that served as their quarters to meet the attack.
Outnumbered but trained by Zaknafein, the Do'Urden troops formed into proper
defensive positions, shielding their wizards and clerics so that they might cast
their spells. An entire contingent of Hun'ett soldiers, empowered with
enchantments of flying, swooped down the cavern wall that housed the royal
chambers of House Do'Urden. Tiny hand-held crossbows clicked and thinned the
ranks of the aerial force with deadly, poison-tipped darts. The aerial invaders'
surprise had been achieved, though, and the Do'Urden troops were quickly put
into a precarious position.
"Hun'ett has not the favor of Lloth!" Malice screamed. "It would not dare to openly
attack!" She flinched at the refuting, thunderous sounds of another, and then still
another, bolt of lightning.
"Oh?" Briza snapped.
Malice cast her daughter a threatening glare but didn't have time to continue the
argument. The normal method of attack by a drow house would involve the rush
of soldiers combined with a mental barrage by the house's highest-ranking
clerics. Malice, though, felt no mental attack, which told her beyond any doubt
that it was indeed House Hun'ett that had come to her gates. The clerics of
Hun'ett, out of the Spider Queen's favor, apparently could not use their Llothgiven
powers to launch the mental assault. If they had, Malice and her daughters,
also out of the Spider Queen's favor, could not have hoped to counter.
"Why would they dare to attack?" Malice wondered aloud.
Briza understood her mother's reasoning. "They are bold indeed,' she said, "to
hope that their soldiers alone can eliminate every member of our house:'
Everyone in the room, every drow in Menzoberranzan, understood the brutal,
absolute punishments exacted upon any house that failed to eradicate another
house. Such attacks were not frowned upon, but getting caught at the deed most
certainly was.
Rizzen, the present patron of House Do'Urden, came into the anteroom then, his
face grim. "We are outnumbered and outpositioned." he said. "Our defeat will be
swift, I fear."
Malice would not accept the news. She struck Rizzen with a blow that knocked
the patron halfway across the floor, then she spun on Jarlaxle. "You must
summon your band!"
Malice cried at the mercenary. "Quickly!"
"Matron,' Jarlaxle stuttered, obviously at a loss. "Bregan D'aerthe is a secretive
group. We do not engage in open warfare. To do so could invoke the wrath of the
ruling council."
"I will pay you whatever you desire,' the desperate matron mother promised.
"But the cost-"
"Whatever you desire!" Malice snarled again.
"Such action-" Jarlaxle began.
Again, Malice did not let him finish his argument. "Save my house, mercenary,'
she growled. "Your profits will be great, but, I warn you, the cost of your failure
will be far greater!"
Jarlaxle did not appreciate being threatened, especially by a lame matron mother
whose entire world was fast crumbling around her. But in the mercenary's ears
the sweet ring of the word "profits" outweighed the threat a thousand times over.
After ten straight years of exorbitant rewards in the Do'Urden-Hun'ett conflict,
Jarlaxle did not doubt Malice's willingness or ability to pay as promised, nor did
he doubt that this deal would prove even more lucrative than the agreement he
had struck with Matron SiNafay Hun'ett earlier that same week.
"As you wish,' he said to Matron Malice with a bow and a sweep of his garish hat.
"I will see what I can do:' A wink at Dinin set the elderboy on his heels as he
exited the room.
When the two got out on the balcony overlooking the Do'Urden compound, they
saw that the situation was even more desperate than Rizzen had described. The
soldiers of
House Do'Urden-those still alive-were trapped in and around one of the huge
stalagmite mounds anchoring the front gate.
One of Hun'ett's flying soldiers dropped onto the balcony at the sight of a
Do'Urden noble, but Dinin dispatched the intruder with a single, blurring attack
routine.
"Well done,' Jarlaxle commented, giving Dinin an approving nod. He moved to
pat the elderboy Do'Urden on the shoulder, but Dinin slipped out of reach.
"We have other business,' he pointedly reminded Jarlaxle.
"Call your troops, and quickly, else I fear that House Hun'ett will win the day:'
"Be at ease, my friend Dinin,' Jarlaxle laughed. He pulled a small whistle
from around his neck and blew into it. Dinin heard not a sound, for the instrument
was magically tuned exclusively for the ears of members of Bregan D'aerthe.
The elderboy Do'Urden watched in amazement as Jarlaxle calmly puffed out a
specific cadence, then he watched in even greater amazement as more than a
hundred of House Hun'ett's soldiers turned against their comrades.
Bregan D'aerthe owed allegiance only to Bregan D'aerthe.
"They could not attack us,' Malice said stubbornly, pacing about the chamber.
"The Spider Queen would not aid them in their venture:'
"They are winning without the Spider Queen's aid,' Rizzen reminded her,
prudently ducking into the room's farthest corner even as he spoke the unwanted
words.
"You said that they would never attack!" Briza growled at her mother. "Even as
you explained why we could not dare to attack them!" Briza remembered that
conversation vividly, for it was she who had suggested the open attack on House
Hun'ett. Malice had scolded her harshly and publicly, and now Briza meant to
return the humiliation. Her voice dripped of angry sarcasm as she aimed each
word at her mother. "Could it be that Matron Malice Do'Urden has erred?"
Malice's reply came in the form of a glare that wavered somewhere between rage
and terror. Briza returned the threatening look without ambiguity and suddenly
the matron mother of House Do'Urden did not feel so very invincible and sure of
her actions. She started forward nervously a moment later when Maya, the
youngest of the Do'Urden daughters, entered the room.
"They have breached the house!" Briza cried, assuming the worst. She grabbed
at her snake-headed whip. " And we have not even begun our preparations for
defense!"
"No!" Maya quickly corrected. "No enemies have crossed the balcony. The battle
has turned against House Hun'ett!"
"As I knew it would,' Malice observed, pulling herself straight and speaking
pointedly at Briza. "Foolish is the house that moves without the favor of Lloth!"
Despite her proclamation, though, Malice guessed that more than the judgment
of the Spider Queen had come into play out in the courtyard. Her reasoning led
her inescapably to Jarlaxle and his untrustworthy band of rogues.
Jarlaxle stepped off the balcony and used his innate drow abilities to levitate
down to the cavern floor. Seeing no need to involve himself in a battle that was
obviously under control, Dinin rested back and watched the mercenary go,
considering all that had just transpired. Jarlaxle had played both sides off against
the other, and once again the mercenary and his band had been the only true
winners. Bregan D'aerthe was undeniably unscrupulous, but, Dinin had to admit,
undeniably effective.
Dinin found that he liked the renegade.
"The accusation has been properly delivered to Matron Baenre?" Malice asked
Briza when the light of Narbondel, the magically heated stalagmite mound that
served as the time clock of Menzoberranzan, began its steady climb, marking the
dawn of the next day.
"The ruling house expected the visit,' Briza replied with a smirk. "All of the city
whispers of the attack, and of how House Do'Urden repelled the invaders of
House Hun'ett:'
Malice futilely tried to hide her vain smile. She enjoyed the attention and the glory
that she knew would be lavished upon her house.
"The ruling council will be convened this very day,' Briza went on. "No doubt to
the dismay of Matron SiNafay Hun'ett and her doomed children:'
Malice nodded her agreement. To eradicate a rival house in Menzoberranzan
was a perfectly acceptable practice among the drow. But to fail in the attempt, to
leave even one witness of noble blood alive to make an accusation, invited the
judgment of the ruling council, a wrath that wrought absolute destruction in its
wake.
A knock turned them both toward the room's ornate door.
"You are summoned, Matron,' Bizzen said as he entered. "Matron Baenre has
sent a chariot for you:'
Malice and Briza exchanged hopeful but nervous glances. When punishment fell
upon House Hun'ett, House Do'Urden would move into the eighth rank of the city
hierarchy, a most desirable position. Only the matron mothers of the top eight
houses were accorded a seat on the city's ruling council.
Already?" Briza asked her mother.
Malice only shrugged in reply and followed Bizzen out of the room and down to
the house's balcony. Bizzen offered her a hand of assistance, which she
promptly and stubbornly slapped away. Her pride apparent with every move,
Malice stepped over the railing and floated down to the courtyard, where the bulk
of her remaining soldiery was gathered. The floating, blue-glowing disk bearing
the insignia of House Baenre hovered just outside the blasted adamantite gate of
the Do'Urden compound.
Malice proudly strode through the gathered crowd, dark elves fell over each other
trying to get out of her way. This was her day, she decided, the day she achieved
the seat on the ruling council, the position she so greatly deserved.
"Matron Mother, I will accompany you through the city,' offered Dinin, standing at
the gate.
"You will remain here with the rest of the family,' Malice corrected. "The
summons is for me alone:'
"How can you know?" Dinin questioned, but he realized he had overstepped his
rank as soon as the words had left his mouth.
By the time Malice turned her reprimanding glare toward him, he had already
disappeared into the mob of soldiers.
"Proper respect,' Malice muttered under her breath, and she instructed the
nearest soldiers to remove a section of the propped and tied gate. With a final,
victorious glance at her subjects, Malice stepped out and took a seat on the
floating disk.
This was not the first time that Malice had accepted such an invitation from
Matron Baenre, so she was not the least bit surprised when several Baenre
clerics moved out from the shadows to encircle the floating disk in a protective
guard. The last time Malice had made this trip, she had been tentative, not really
understanding Baenre's intent in summoning her. This time, though, Malice
folded her arms defiantly across her chest and let the curious onlookers view her
in all the splendor of her victory.
Malice accepted the stares proudly, feeling positively superior. Even when the
disk reached the fabulous weblike fence of House Baenre, with its thousand
marching guards and towering stalagmite and stalactite structures, Malice's pride
had not diminished.
She was of the ruling council now, or soon would be, no longer did she have to
feel intimidated anywhere in the city.
Or so she thought.
"Your presence is requested in the chapel,' one of Baenre's clerics said to her
when the disk came to a stop at the base of the great domed building's sweeping
stairs.
Malice stepped down and ascended the polished stones. As soon as she
entered, she noticed a figure sitting on one of the chairs atop the raised central
altar. The seated drow, the only other person visible in the chapel, apparently did
not notice that Malice had entered. She sat back comfortably, watching the huge
illusionary image at the top of the dome shift through its forms, first appearing as
a gigantic spider, then a beautiful drow female.
As she moved closer, Malice recognized the robes of a matron mother, and she
assumed, as she had all along, that it was Matron Baenre herself, the most
powerful figure in all of Menzoberranzan, awaiting her. Malice made her way up
the altar's stairs, coming up behind the seated drow. Not waiting for an invitation,
she boldly walked around to greet the other matron mother.
It was not, however, the ancient and emaciated form of Matron Baenre that
Malice Do'Urden encountered on the dais of the Baenre chapel. The seated
matron mother was not old beyond the years of a drow and as withered and dried
as some bloodless corpse. Indeed, this drow was no older than Malice and quite
diminutive. Malice recognized her all too well.
"SiNafay!" she cried, nearly toppling.
"Malice,' the other replied calmly.
A thousand troublesome possibilities rolled through Malice's mind. SiNafay
Hun'ett should have been huddling in fear in her doomed house, awaiting the
annihilation of her family. Yet here SiNafay sat, comfortably, in the hallowed
quarters of Menzoberranzan's most important family!
"You do not belong in this place!" Malice protested, her slender fists clenched at
her side. She considered the possibilities of attacking her rival there and then, of
throttling SiNafay with her own hands.
"Be at ease, Malice,' SiNafay remarked casually. "I am here by the invitation of
Matron Baenre, as are you:'
The mention of Matron Baenre and the reminder of where they were calmed
Malice considerably. One did not act out of sorts in the chapel of House Baenre!
Malice moved to the opposite end of the circular dais and took a seat, her gaze
never leaving the smugly smiling face of SiNafay Hun'ett.
After a few interminable moments of silence, Malice had to speak her mind. "It
was House Hun'ett that attacked my family in the last dark of Narbondel,' she
said. "I have many witnesses to the fact. There can be no doubt!"
"None,' SiNafay replied, her agreement catching Malice off her guard.
"You admit the deed?" she balked.
"Indeed,' said SiNafay. "Never have I denied it:'
"Yet you live,' Malice sneered. "The laws of Menzoberranzan demand justice
upon you and your house:'
"Justice?" SiNafay laughed at the absurd notion. Justice had never been more
than a facade and a means of keeping the pretense of order in chaotic
Menzoberranzan. "I acted as the Spider Queen demanded of me:'
"If the Spider Queen approved of your methods, you would have been victorious,'
Malice reasoned.
"Not so,' interrupted another voice. Malice and SiNafay turned about just as
Matron Baenre magically appeared, sitting comfortably in the chair farthest back
on the dais.
Malice wanted to scream out at the withered matron mother, both for spying on
her conversation and for apparently refuting her claims against SiNafay. Malice
had managed to survive the dangers of Menzoberranzan for five hundred years,
though, primarily because she understood the implications of angering one such
as Matron Baenre.
"I claim the rights of accusation against House Hun'ett,' she said calmly.
"Granted,' replied Matron Baenre. "As you have said, and as SiNafay agreed,
there can be no doubt:'
Malice turned triumphantly on SiNafay, but the matron mother of House Hun'ett
still sat relaxed and unconcerned.
"Then why is she here?" Malice cried, her tone edged in explosive violence.
"SiNafay is an outlaw. She-"
"We have not argued against your words,' Matron Baenre interrupted. "House
Hun'ett attacked and failed. The penalties for such a deed are well known and
agreed upon, and the ruling council will convene this very day to see that justice
is carried through:'
"Then why is SiNafay here?" Malice demanded.
"Do you doubt the wisdom of my attack?" SiNafay asked Malice, trying to keep a
chuckle under her breath.
"You were defeated,' Malice reminded her matter-of-factly. "That alone should
provide your answer:'
"Lloth demanded the attack,' said Matron Baenre.
"Why, then, was House Hun'ett defeated?" Malice asked stubbornly. "If the
Spider Queen-"
"I did not say that the Spider Queen had imbued her blessings upon House
Hun'ett,' Matron Baenre interrupted, somewhat crossly. Malice shifted back in her
seat, remembering her place and her predicament.
"I said only that Lloth demanded the attack,' Matron Baenre continued. "For ten
years all of Menzoberranzan has suffered the spectacle of your private war. The
intrigue and excitement wore away long ago, let me assure you both. It had to be
decided:'
"And it was,' declared Malice, rising from her seat. "House Do'Urden has proven
victorious, and I claim the rights of accusation against SiNafay Hun'ett and her
family!"
"Sit down, Malice,' SiNafay said. "There is more to this than your simple rights of
accusation:'
Malice looked to Matron Baenre for confirmation, though, considering the present
situation, she could not doubt SiNafay's words.
"It is done,' Matron Baenre said to her. "House Do'Urden has won, and House
Hun'ett will be no more:'
Malice fell back into her seat, smiling smugly at SiNafay. Still, though, the matron
mother of House Hun'ett did not seem the least bit concerned.
"I will watch the destruction of your house with great pleasure,' Malice assured
her rival. She turned to Baenre. "When will punishment be exacted?"
"It is already done,' Matron Baenre replied mysteriously.
"SiNafay lives!" Malice cried.
"No,' the withered matron mother corrected. "She who was SiNafay Hun'ett lives:'
Now Malice was beginning to understand. House Baenre had always been
opportunistic. Could it be that Matron Baenre was stealing the high priestesses of
House Hun'ett to add to her own collection?
"You will shelter her?" Malice dared to ask.
"No,' Matron Baenre replied evenly. "That task will fall to you:'
Malice's eyes went wide. Of all the many duties she had ever been appointed in
her days as a high priestess of Lloth, she could think of none more distasteful.
"She is my enemy! You ask that I give her shelter?"
"She is your daughter,' Matron Baenre shot back. Her tone softened and a wry
smile cracked her thin lips. "Your oldest daughter, returned from travels to Ched
Nasad, or some other city of our kin:'
"Why are you doing this?" Malice demanded. "It is unprecedented!"
"Not completely correct,' replied Matron Baenre. Her fingers tapped together out
in front of her while she sank back within her thoughts, remembering some of the
strange consequences of the endless line of battles within the drow city.
"Outwardly, your observations are correct,' she continued to explain to Malice.
"But surely you are wise enough to know that many things occur behind the
appearances in
Menzoberranzan. House Hun'ett must be destroyed-that cannot be changed-and
all of the nobles of House Hun'ett must be slaughtered. It is, after all, the civilized
thing to do:' She paused a moment to ensure that Malice was fully
comprehending the meaning of her next statement. "They must appear, at least,
to be slaughtered:'
"And you will arrange this?" Malice asked.
"I already have,' Matron Baenre assured her.
"But what is the purpose?"
"When House Hun'ett initiated its attack against you, did you call upon the Spider
Queen in your struggles?" Matron Baenre asked bluntly.
The question startled Malice, and the expected answer upset her more than a
little.
"And when House Hun'ett was repelled,' Matron Baenre went on coldly, "did you
give praise to the Spider Queen? Did you call upon a handmaiden of Lloth in
your moment of victory, Malice Do'Urden?"
"Am I on trial here?" Malice cried. "You know the answer, Matron Baenre:' She
looked at SiNafay uncomfortably as she replied, fearing that she might be giving
some valued information away. "You are aware of my situation concerning the
Spider Queen. I dare not summon a yochlol until I have seen some sign that I
have regained Lloth's favor:'
"And you have seen no sign,' SiNafay remarked.
"None other than the defeat of my rival,' Malice growled back at her.
"That was not a sign from the Spider Queen,' Matron Baenre assured them both.
"Lloth did not involve herself in your struggles. She only demanded that they be
finished:'
"Is she pleased at the outcome?" Malice asked bluntly.
"That is yet to be determined,' replied Matron Baenre.
"Many years ago, Lloth made clear her desires that Malice Do'Urden sit upon the
ruling council. Beginning with the next light of Narbondel, it shall be so:'
Malice's chin rose with pride.
"But understand your dilemma,' Matron Baenre scolded her, rising up out of her
chair. Malice slumped back immediately. "You have lost more than half of your
soldiers,' Baenre explained. "And you do not have a large family surrounding and
supporting you. You rule the eighth house of the city, yet it is known by all that
you are not in the Spider Queen's favor. How long do you believe House
Do'Urden will hold its position? Your seat on the ruling council is in jeopardy even
before you have assumed it!
Malice could not refute the ancient matron's logic. They both knew the ways of
Menzoberranzan. With House Do'Urden so obviously crippled, some lesser
house would soon take advantage of the opportunity to better its station. The
attack by House Hun'ett would not be the last battle fought in the Do'Urden
compound.
"So I give to you SiNafay Hun'ett . . . Shi'nayne Do'Urden . . a new daughter, a
new high priestess,' said Matron Baenre. She turned then to SiNafay to continue
her explanation, but Malice found herself suddenly distracted as a voice called
out to her in her thoughts, a telepathic message. Keep her only as long as you
need her, Malice Do'Urden, it said. Malice looked around, guessing the source of
the communication. On a previous visit to House Baenre, she had met Matron
Baenre's mind flayer, a telepathic beast. The creature was nowhere in sight, but
neither had Matron Baenre been when Malice had first entered the chapel.
Malice looked around alternately at the remaining empty seats atop the dais, but
the stone furniture showed no signs of any occupants.
A second telepathic message left her no doubts.
You will know when the time is right.
". . . and the remaining fifty of House Hun'ett's soldiers," Matron Baenre was
saying. "Do you agree, Matron Malice?"
Malice looked at SiNafay, an expression that might have been acceptance or
wicked irony. "I do, she replied.
"Go, then, Shi'nayne Do'Urden,' Matron Baenre instructed SiNafay. "Join your
remaining soldiers in the courtyard. My wizards will get you to House Do'Urden in
secrecy:'
SiNafay cast a suspicious glance Malice's way, then moved out of the great
chapel.
"I understand,' Malice said to her hostess when SiNafay had gone.
"You understand nothing!" Matron Baenre yelled back at her, suddenly enraged.
"I have done all that I may for you, Malice Do'Urden! It was Lloth's wish that you
sit upon the ruling council, and I have arranged, at great personal cost, for that to
be so:'
Malice knew then, beyond any doubt, that House Baenre had prompted House
Hun'ett to action. How deep did Matron Baenre's influence go, Malice wondered?
Perhaps the withered matron mother also had anticipated, and possibly
arranged, the actions of Jarlaxle and the soldiers of Bregan D'aerthe, ultimately
the deciding factor in the battle. She would have to find out about that possibility,
Malice promised herself. Jarlaxle had dipped his greedy fingers quite deeply into
her purse.
"No more,' Matron Baenre continued. "Now you are left to your own wiles. You
have not found the favor of Lloth, and that is the only way you, and House
Do'Urden, will survive!"
Malice's fist clenched the arm of her chair so tightly that she almost expected to
hear the stone cracking beneath it. She had hoped, with the defeat of House
Hun'ett, that she had put the blasphemous deeds of her youngest son behind
her.
"You know what must be done,' said Matron Baenre. "Correct the wrong, Malice.
I have put myself forward on your behalf. I will not tolerate continued failure!"
"The arrangements have been explained to us, Matron Mother,' Dinin said to
Malice when she returned to the adamantite gate of House Do'Urden. He
followed Malice across the compound and then levitated up beside her to the
balcony outside the noble quarters of the house.
"All of the family is gathered in the anteroom,' Dinin went on. "Even the newest
member,' he added with a wink.
Malice did not respond to her son's feeble attempt at humor. She pushed Dinin
aside roughly and stormed down the central corridor, commanding the anteroom
door to open with a single powerful word. The family scrambled out of her way as
she crossed to her throne, on the far side of the spider-shaped table.
They had anticipated a long meeting, to learn the new situation confronting them
and the challenges they must overcome. What they got instead was a brief
glimpse at the rage burning within Matron Malice. She glared at them alternately,
letting each of them know beyond any doubt that she would not accept anything
less than she demanded. Her voice grating as though her mouth were filled with
pebbles, she growled, "Find Drizzt and bring him to me!"
Briza started to protest, but Malice shot her a glare so utterly cold and
threatening that it stole the words away. The eldest daughter, as stubborn as her
mother and always ready for an argument, averted her eyes. And no one else in
the anteroom, though they shared Briza's unspoken concerns, made any motion
to argue.
Malice then left them to sort out the specifics of how they would accomplish the
task. Details were not at all important to Malice.
The only part she meant to play in all of this was the thrust of the ceremonial
dagger into her youngest son's chest.
CHAPTER 2
Voices in the Dark
Drizzt stretched away his weariness and forced himself to his feet. The efforts of
his battle against the basilisk the night before, of slipping fully into that primal
state so necessary for survival, had drained him thorougly. Yet Drizzt knew that
he could afford no more rest, his rothe herd, the guaranteed food supply, had
been scattered among the maze of tunnels and had to be retrieved.
Drizzt quickly surveyed the small and unremarkable cave that served as his
home, ensuring that all was as it should be. His eyes lingered on the onyx
statuette of the panther. He was held by a profound longing for Guenhwyvar's
companionship. In his ambush of the basilisk, Drizzt had kept the panther by his
side for a long period-nearly the entire night-and Guenhwyvar would need to rest
back on the Astral Plane. More than a full day would pass before Drizzt could
bring a rested Guenhwyvar forth again, and to attempt to use the figurine before
then in any but a desperate situation would be foolish. With a resigned shrug,
Drizzt dropped the statuette into his pocket and tried vainly to dismiss his
loneliness.
After a quick inspection of the rock barricade blocking the entrance to the main
corridor, Drizzt moved to the smaller crawl tunnel at the back of the cave. He
noticed the scratches on the wall by the tunnel, the notches he had scrawled to
mark the passage of the days. Drizzt absently scraped another one now, but
realized that it was not important. How many times had he forgotten to scratch
the mark? How many days had slipped past him unnoticed, between the
hundreds of scratches on that wall?
Somehow, it no longer seemed to matter. Day and night were one, and all the
days were one, in the life of the hunter. Drizzt hauled himself up into the tunnel
and crawled for many minutes toward the dim light source at the other end.
Although the presence of light, the result of the glow of an unusual type of
fungus, normally would have been uncomfortable to a dark elf's eyes, Drizzt felt a
sincere sense of security as he crossed through the crawl tunnel into the long
chamber. Its floor was broken into two levels, the lower being a moss-filled bed
crossed by a small stream, and the upper being a grove of towering mushrooms.
Drizzt headed for the grove, though he was not normally welcomed there. He
knew that the myconids, the fungus-men, a weird cross between humanoid and
toadstool, were watching him anxiously. The basilisk had come in here in its first
travels to the region, and the myconids had suffered a great loss. Now they were
no doubt scared and dangerous, but Drizzt suspected that they knew, as well,
that it was he who had slain the monster. Myconids were not stupid beings, if
Drizzt kept his weapons sheathed and made no unexpected moves, the fungusmen
probably would accept his passage through their tended grove.
The wall to the upper tier was more than ten feet high and nearly sheer,
but Drizzt scaled it as easily and as quickly as if it had sported a wide and flat
staircase. A group of myconids fanned around him as he reached the top, some
only half Drizzt's height, but most twice as tall as the drow. Drizzt crossed his
arms over his chest, a commonly accepted Underdark signal of peace.
The fungus-men found Drizzt's appearance disgusting-as disgusting as he
considered them-but they did indeed understand that Drizzt had destroyed the
basilisk. For many years the myconids had lived beside the rogue drow, each
protecting the life-filled chamber that served as their mutual sanctuary. An oasis
such as this place, with edible plants, a stream full of fish, and a herd of rothe,
was not common in the harsh and empty stone caverns of the Underdark, and
predators wandering along the outer tunnels invariably found their way in. Then it
was left to the fungus-men, and to Drizzt, to defend their domain.
The largest of the myconids moved forward to stand before the dark elf. Drizzt
made no move, understanding the importance of establishing an acceptance
between himself and the new king of the fungus-man colony. Still, Drizzt tensed
his muscles, preparing a spring to the side if things did not go as he expected.
The myconid spewed forth a cloud of spores. Drizzt studied them in the splitsecond
it took them to descend over him, knowing that the mature myconids
could emit many different types of spore, some quite dangerous. But Drizzt
recognized the hue of this particular cloud and accepted it wholly.
King dead. Me king, came the myconid's thoughts through the telepathic bond
inspired by the spore cloud.
You are king, Drizzt responded mentally. How he wished these fungoids could
speak aloud! As it was?
Bottom for dark elf, grove for myconid, replied the fungus-man.
Agreed-
Grove for myconid! the fungus-man thought again, this time emphatically.
Drizzt silently dropped down off the ledge. He had accomplished his mission with
the fungoid, neither he nor the new king had any desire to continue the meeting.
Off at a swift pace, Drizzt leaped the five-foot-wide stream and padded out
across the thick moss. The chamber was longer than it was wide and it rolled
back for many yards, turning a slight bend before it reached the larger exit to the
twisting maze of Underdark tunnels. Around that bend, Drizzt looked again upon
the destruction wreaked by the basilisk. Several half-eaten rothe lay about-Drizzt
would have to dispose of those corpses before their stench attracted even more
unwelcome visitors-and other rothe stood perfectly still, petrified by the gaze of
the dreaded monster. Directly in front of the chamber exit stood the former
myconid king, a twelve foot giant, now no more than an ornamental statue.
Drizzt paused to regard it. He had never learned the fungoid's name, and had
never given it his, but Drizzt supposed that the thing had been his ally at least,
perhaps even his friend. They had lived side by side for several years, though
they had rarely encountered each other, and both had realized a bit more
security just by the other's presence. All told, though, Drizzt felt no remorse at the
sight of his petrified ally. In the Underdark, only the strongest survived, and this
time the myconid king had not been strong enough. In the wilds of the
Underdark, failure allowed for no second chance.
Out in the tunnels again, Drizzt felt his rage beginning to build. He welcomed it
fully, focusing his thoughts on the carnage in his domain and accepting the anger
as an ally in the wilds. He came through a series of tunnels and turned into the
one where he had placed his darkness spell the night before, where Guenhwyvar
had crouched, ready to spring upon the basilisk. Drizzt's spell was long gone now
and, using his infravision, he could make out several warm-glowing forms
crawling over the cooling mound that Drizzt knew to be the dead monster.
The sight of the thing only heightened the hunter's rage. Instinctively, he grasped
the hilt of one of his scimitars. As though it moved of its own accord, the weapon
shot out as Drizzt passed the basilisk's head, splatting sickeningly into the
exposed brains. Several blind cave rats took flight at the sound and Drizzt, again
without thinking, snapped off a thrust with his second blade, pinning one to the
stone. Without even slowing his pace, he scooped the rat up and dropped it into
his pouch. Finding the rothe could be a tedious process, and the hunter would
need to eat.
For the remainder of that day and half of the next, the hunter moved out away
from his domain. The cave rat was not a particularly enjoyable meal, but it
sustained Drizzt, allowing him to continue, allowing him to survive. For the hunter
in the Underdark, nothing else mattered.
That second day out, the hunter knew he was closing in on a group of his lost
beasts. He summoned Guenhwyvar to his side and, with the panther's help, had
little trouble finding the rothe. Drizzt had hoped that all of the herd would still be
together, but he found only a half dozen in the area. Six were better than none,
though, and Drizzt set Guenhwyvar into motion, herding the rothe back toward
the moss cave. Drizzt set a brutal pace, knowing that the task would be much
easier and safer with Guenhwyvar by his side. By the time the panther tired and
had to return to its home plane, the rothe were comfortably grazing by the
familiar stream.
The drow set out again immediately, this time taking two dead rats along for the
ride. He called Guenhwyvar again when he was able and dismissed the panther
when he had to, then again after that, as the days rolled by without further sign.
But the hunter did not surrender his search. Frightened rothe could cover an
incredible amount of ground, and in the maze of twisting tunnels and huge
caverns, the hunter knew that many more days could pass before he caught up
to the beasts.
Drizzt found his food where he could, taking down a bat with a perfect throw of a
dagger-after tossing up a deceptive screen of pebbles-and dropping a boulder
onto the back of a giant Underdark crab. Eventually, Drizzt grew weary of the
search and longed for the security of his small cave. Doubting that the rothe,
running blind, could have survived this long out in the tunnels, so far from their
water and food, he accepted his herd's loss and decided to return home via a
route that would bring him back to the region of the moss cavern from a different
direction.
Only the clear tracks of his lost herd would detour him from his set course, Drizzt
decided, but as he rounded a bend halfway home, a strange sound caught his
attention and held it.
Drizzt pressed his hands against the stone, feeling the subtle, rhythmical
vibrations. A short distance away, some thing banged the stone in succession.
Measured hammering.
The hunter drew his scimitars and crept along, using the continuing vibrations to
guide him through the winding passageways.
The flickering light of a fire dropped him into a crouch, but he did not flee, drawn
by the knowledge that an intelligent being was nearby. Quite possibly the
stranger would prove to be a threat, but perhaps, Drizzt hoped in the back of his
mind, it could be something more than that.
Then Drizzt saw them, two banging at the stone with crafted pickaxes, another
collecting rubble in a wheelbarrow, and two more standing guard. The hunter
knew at once that more guards would be about, he probably had penetrated their
defenses without even seeing them. Drizzt summoned one of the abilities of his
heritage and drifted slowly up into the air, guiding his levitation with his hands
along the stone. Luckily, the tunnel was high at this point, so the hunter could
observe the mining creatures in relative safety.
They were shorter that Drizzt and hairless, with squat and muscled torsos
perfectly designed for the mining that was their calling in life. Drizzt had
encountered this race before and had learned much of them during his years at
the Academy back in Menzoberranzan. These were svirfnebli, deep gnomes, the
most hated enemies of the drow in all the Underdark.
Once, long ago, Drizzt had led a drow patrol into battle against a group of
svirfnebli and personally had defeated an earth elemental that the deep gnome
leader had summoned. Drizzt remembered that time now, and, like all of the
memories of his existence, the thoughts pained him. He had been captured by
the deep gnomes, roughly tied, and held prisoner in a secret chamber. The
svirfnebli had not mistreated him, though they suspected-and explained to Drizztthat
they would eventually have to kill him. The group's leader had promised
Drizzt as much mercy as the situation allowed. Drizzt's comrades, though, led by
Dinin, his own brother, had stormed in, showing the deep gnomes no mercy at
all.
Drizzt had managed to convince his brother to spare the svirfneblin leader's life,
but Dinin, showing typical drow cruelty, had ordered the deep gnome's hands
severed before releasing him to flee to his homeland.
Drizzt shook himself from the anguishing memories and forced his thoughts back
to the situation at hand. Deep gnomes could be formidable adversaries, he
reminded himself, and they would not likely welcome a drow elf to their mining
operations. He had to keep alert.
The miners apparently had struck a rich vein, for they began talking in excited
tones. Drizzt reveled in the sound of those words, though he could not begin to
understand the strange gnomish language. A smile not inspired by victory in
battle found its way onto Drizzt's face for the first time in years as the svirfnebli
scrambled about the stone, tossing huge chunks into their wheelbarrows and
calling for other nearby companions to come and join in the fun. As Drizzt had
suspected, more than a dozen unseen svirfnebli came in from every direction.
Drizzt found a high perch against the wall and watched the miners long after his
levitation spell had expired. When at last their wheelbarrows were overfilled, the
deep gnomes formed a column and started away. Drizzt realized that his prudent
course at that time would be to let them get far away, then slip back to his home.
But, against the simple logic that guided his survival, Drizzt found that he could
not so easily let the sound of the voices get away. He picked his way down the
high wall and fell into pace behind the svirfneblin caravan, wondering where it
would lead.
For many days Drizzt followed the deep gnomes. He resisted the temptation to
summon Guenhwyvar, knowing that the panther could use the extended rest and
himself satisfied in the company, however distant, of the deep gnomes' chatter.
Every instinct warned the hunter against continuing in his actions, but for the first
time in a very long time, Drizzt overruled the instincts of his more primal self.
He needed to hear the gnomish voices more than he needed the simple
necessities of survival.
The corridors became more worked, less natural, around him, and Drizzt knew
that he was approaching the svirfneblin homeland. Again the potential dangers
loomed up before him, and again he dismissed them as secondary. He
quickened his pace and put the mining caravan in sight, suspecting that the
svirfnebli would have some cunning traps set about.
The deep gnomes measured their steps at this point, taking care to avoid certain
areas. Drizzt carefully mimicked their movements and nodded knowingly as he
noticed a loose stone here and a low trip-wire there. Then Drizzt ducked back
behind an outcropping as new voices joined the sound of the miners.
The mining troupe had come to a long and wide stairway, ascending between
two walls of absolutely sheer and uncracked stone. On the side of the stair was
an opening barely high and wide enough for the wheelbarrows, and Drizzt
watched with sincere admiration as the deep gnome miners moved the carts to
this opening and fastened the lead one to a chain. A series of taps on the stone
sent a signal to an unseen operator, and the chain creaked, drawing the
wheelbarrow into the hole. One by one the carts disappeared, and the svirfneblin
band thinned as well, taking to the stairs as their load lessened.
As the two remaining deep gnomes hitched the last cart to the chain and tapped
out the signal, Drizzt took a gamble borne of desperation. He waited for the deep
gnomes to turn their backs and darted to the cart, catching it just as it
disappeared into the low tunnel. Drizzt understood the depth of his foolishness
when the last deep gnome, still apparently unaware of his presence, replaced a
stone at the bottom of the passage, blocking any possible retreat.
The chain pulled on and the cart rolled up at an angle as steep as the paralleling
staircase. Drizzt could see nothing ahead, for the wheelbarrow, designed for a
perfect fit, took up the entire height and width of the tunnel. Drizzt noticed then
that the cart had little wheels along its sides as well, aiding in its passage. It felt
so good to be in the presence of such intelligence again, but Drizzt could not
ignore the danger surrounding him. The svirfnebli would not take well to an
intruding drow elf, it was likely they would strike out with weapons, not questions.
After several minutes, the passage leveled off and widened. A single svirfneblin
was there, effortlessly turning the crank that hauled up the wheelbarrows. Intent
on his business, the deep gnome did not notice Drizzt's dark form dart from
behind the last cart and silently slip through the room's side door.
Drizzt heard voices as soon as he opened the door. He continued ahead, though,
having nowhere else to go, and dropped to his belly on a narrow ledge. The deep
gnomes, guards and miners, were below him, talking on a landing at the top of
the wide stairway. At least a score stood there now, the miners recounting the
tales of their rich find.
At the back end of the landing, through two immense and partly ajar metal-bound
stone doors, Drizzt caught a glimpse of the svirfneblin city. The drow could see
but a fraction of the place, and that not very well from his position on the ledge,
but he guessed that the cavern beyond those massive doors was not nearly as
large as the chamber housing Menzoberranzan.
Drizzt wanted to go in there! He wanted to jump up and rush through those
doors, give himself over to the deep gnomes for whatever judgment they deemed
fair. Perhaps they would accept him, perhaps they would see Drizzt Do'Urden for
who he truly was.
The svirfnebli on the landing, laughing and chatting, made their way into the city.
Drizzt had to go now, had to spring up and follow them beyond the massive
doors.
But the hunter, the being who had survived a decade in the savage wilds of the
Underdark, could not move from the ledge. The hunter, the being who had
defeated a basilisk and countless other of this dangerous world's monsters, could
not give himself over in the hopes of civilized mercy. The hunter did not
understand such concepts.
The massive stone doors closed-and the moment of flickering light in Drizzt's
darkening heart died-with a resounding crash.
After a long and tormented moment, Drizzt Do'Urden rolled off the ledge and
dropped to the landing at the top of the stairs. His vision blurred suddenly as he
made his way down, the path away from the teeming life beyond the doors, and it
was only the primal instincts of the hunter that sensed the presence of still more
svirfneblin guards. The hunter leaped wildly over the startled deep gnomes and
rushed out again into the freedom offered by the wild Underdark's open
passageways.
When he had put the svirfneblin city far behind, Drizzt reached into his pocket
and took out the statuette, the summons to his only companion. A moment later,
though, Drizzt dropped the figurine back, refusing to call the cat, punishing
himself for his weakness on the ledge. If he had been stronger on the ledge
beside the immense doors, he could have put an end to his torment, one way or
another.
The instincts of hunter battled Drizzt for control as he made his way along the
passages that would take him back to the moss-filled cavern. As the Underdark
and the press of undeniable danger continued to close in around him, those
primal, alert instincts took command, denying any further distracting thoughts of
the svirfnebli and their city.
Those primal instincts were the salvation and the damnation of Drizzt Do'Urden.
CHAPTER 3
Snakes And Swords
"How many weeks has it been?" Dinin signaled to Briza in the silent hand code
of the drow. "How many weeks have we hunted through these tunnels for our
renegade brother?"
Dinin's expression revealed his sarcasm as he motioned the thoughts. Briza
scowled at him and did not reply. She cared for this tedious duty even less than
he. She was a high priestess of Lloth and had been the eldest daughter,
accorded a high place of honor within the family structure. Never before would
Briza have been sent off on such a hunt. But now, for some unexplained reason,
SiNafay Hun'ett had joined the family, relegating Briza to a lesser position.
"Five?" Dinin continued, his anger growing with each darting movement of his
slender fingers. "Six? How long has it been, sister?" he pressed. "How long has
SiNaf-Shi'nayne. . . been sitting at Matron Malice's side?"
Briza's snake-headed whip came off her belt, and she spun angrily on her
brother. Dinin, realizing that he had gone too far with his sarcastic prodding,
defensively drew his sword, and tried to duck away. Briza's strike came faster,
easily defeating Dinin's pitiful attempt at a parry, and three of the six heads
connected squarely on the elderboy Do'Urden's chest and shoulder. Cold pain
spread through Dinin's body, leaving only a helpless numbness in its wake. His
sword arm drooped and he started to topple forward.
Briza's powerful hand shot out and caught him by the throat as he swooned,
easily lifting him onto his toes. Then, looking around at the other five members of
the hunting party to ensure that none were moving in Dinin's favor, Briza
slammed her stunned brother roughly into the stone wall. The high priestess
leaned heavily on Dinin, one hand tight against his throat.
"A wise male would measure his gestures more carefully,' Briza snarled aloud,
though she and the others had been explicitly instructed by Matron Malice not to
communicate in any method other than the silent code once they were beyond
Menzoberranzan's borders.
It took Dinin a long while to fully appreciate his predicament. As the numbness
wore away, he realized that he could not draw breath, and though his hand still
held his sword, Briza, outweighing him by a score of pounds, had it pinned close
to his side. Even more distressing, his sister's free hand held the dreaded snakewhip
aloft. Unlike ordinary whips, that evil instrument needed little room to work
its snap. The animated snake heads could coil and strike from close range simply
as an extension of their wielder's will.
"Matron Malice would not question your death,' Briza whispered harshly. "Her
sons have ever been trouble to her!"
Dinin looked past his hulking captor to the common soldiers of the patrol.
"Witnesses?" Briza laughed, guessing his thoughts. "Do you really believe they
will speak against a high priestess for the sake of a mere male?" Briza's eyes
narrowed and she moved her face right up to Dinin's. "A mere male corpse?" She
cackled once again and released Dinin suddenly, and he dropped to his knees,
struggling to regain a normal rhythm to his breathing.
"Come,' Briza signaled in the silent code to the rest of the patrol. "I sense that my
youngest brother is not in this area. We shall return to the city and restock our
packs:'
Dinin watched his sister's back as she made the preparations for their departure.
He wanted nothing more than to put his sword between her shoulder blades.
Dinin was smarter than to try such a move, though. Briza had been a high
priestess of the Spider Queen for more than three centuries and was now in the
favor of Lloth, even if Matron Malice and the rest of House Do'Urden was not.
Even if her evil goddess had not been looking over her, Briza was a formidable
foe, skilled in spells and with that cruel whip always ready at her side.
"My sister,' Dinin called after her as she started away. Briza spun on him,
surprised that he would dare to speak aloud to her.
"Accept my apologies,' Dinin said. He motioned for the other soldiers to keep
moving, then returned to using the hand code, so that the commoners would not
know his further conversation with Briza.
"I am not pleased by the addition of SiNafay Hun'ett to the family,' Dinin
explained.
Briza's lips curled up in one of her typically ambiguous smiles, Dinin couldn't be
sure if she was agreeing with him or mocking him. "You think yourself wise
enough to question the decisions of Matron Malice?" her fingers asked.
"No!" Dinin signaled back emphatically. "Matron Malice does as she must, and
always for the welfare of House Do'Urden. But I do not trust the displaced
Hun'ett. SiNafay watched her house smashed into bits of heated rock by the
judgment of the ruling council. All of her treasured children were slain, and most
of her commoners as well. Can she truly be loyal to House Do'Urden after such a
loss?"
"Foolish male,' Briza signaled in reply. "Priestesses understand that loyalty is
owed only to Lloth. SiNafay's house is no more, thus SiNafay is no more. She is
Shi'nayne Do'Urden now, and by the order of the Spider Queen, she will fully
accept all of the responsibilities that accompany the name:'
"I do not trust her,' Dinin reiterated. "Nor am I pleased to see my sisters, the true
Do'Urdens, moved down the hierarchy to make room for her. Shi'nayne should
have been placed beneath Maya, or housed among the commoners:'
Briza snarled at him, though she wholeheartedly agreed.
"Shi'nayne's rank in the family is of no concern to you. House Do'Urden is
stronger for the addition of another high priestess. That is all a male need care
about!"
Dinin nodded his acceptance of her logic and wisely sheathed his sword before
beginning to rise from his knees. Briza likewise replaced the snake-whip on her
belt but continued to watch her volatile brother out of the corner of her eye.
Dinin would be more careful around Briza now. He knew that his survival
depended on his ability to walk beside his sister, for Malice would continue to
send Briza out on these hunting patrols beside him. Briza was the strongest of
the Do'Urden daughters, with the best chance of finding and capturing Drizzt.
And Dinin, having been a patrol leader for the city for more than a decade, was
the most familiar of anyone in the house with the tunnels beyond
Menzoberranzan.
Dinin shrugged at his rotten luck and followed his sister back down the tunnels to
the city. A short respite, no more than a day, and they would be back on the
march again, back on the prowl for their elusive and dangerous brother, whom
Dinin truly had no desire to find.
Guenhwyvar's head turned abruptly and the great panther froze perfectly still,
one paw cocked and ready to move.
"You heard it, too,' Drizzt whispered, moving tightly to the panther's side. "Come,
my friend. Let us see what new enemy has entered our domain:'
They sped off together, equally silent, down corridors they knew so very well.
Drizzt stopped suddenly, and Guenhwyvar did likewise, at the echo of a scuffle. It
was made by a boot, Drizzt knew, and not by some natural monster of the
Underdark. Drizzt pointed up to a broken pile of rubble overlooking a wide and
many-tiered cavern on its other side. Guenhwyvar led him there, where they
could find a better vantage point. The drow patrol came into view only a few
moments later, a group of seven, though they were too far away for Drizzt to
make out any particulars. Drizzt was amazed that he had heard them so easily,
for he remembered those days when he had taken the point position on such
patrols. How alone he had felt then, up at the lead of more than a dozen dark
elves, for they made not a whisper with their practiced movements and they kept
to the shadows so well that even Drizzt's keen eyes could not begin to locate
them.
And yet, this hunter that Drizzt had become, this primal, instinctive self, had
found this group easily.
Briza stopped suddenly and closed her eyes, concentrating on the emanations of
her spell of location.
"What is it?" Dinin's fingers asked her when she looked back to him. Her startled
and obviously excited expression revealed much.
"Drizzt?" Dinin breathed aloud, hardly able to believe.
"Silence!" Briza's hands cried out at him. She glanced around to survey her
surroundings, then signaled to the patrol to follow her to the shadows of the wall
in the immense, and exposed, cavern.
Briza nodded her confirmation to Dinin then, confident that their mission would at
last be completed.
"Can you be sure it is Drizzt?" Dinin's fingers asked. In his excitement, he
could barely keep the movements precise enough to convey his thoughts.
"Perhaps some scavenger-"
"We know that our brother lives,' Briza motioned quickly.
"Matron Malice would no longer be out of Lloth's favor if it were otherwise. And if
Drizzt lives, then we can assume that he possesses the item'"
The sudden evasive movement of the patrol caught Drizzt by surprise. The group
could not possibly have seen him under the cover of the jutting rocks, and he
held faith in the silence of his footfalls, and of Guenhwyvar's. Yet Drizzt felt
certain that it was he the patrol was hiding from. Something felt out of place in
this whole encounter. Dark elves were rare this far from Menzoberranzan.
Perhaps it was no more than the paranoia necessary to survive in the wilds of the
Underdark, Drizzt told himself. Still, he suspected that more than chance had
brought this group to his domain.
"Go, Guenhwyvar,' he whispered to the cat. "View our guests and return to me:'
The panther sped away through the shadows circumventing the large cavern.
Drizzt sank low into the rubble, listened, and waited.
Guenhwyvar returned to him only a minute later, though it seemed an eternity to
Drizzt.
"Did you know them?" Drizzt asked. The cat scratched a paw across the stone.
"Of our old patrol?" Drizzt wondered aloud. "The fighters you and I walked
beside?"
Guenhwyvar seemed uncertain and made no definite movements.
"A Hun'ett then,' Drizzt said, thinking he had solved the riddle. House Hun'ett had
at last come looking for him to repay him for the deaths of Alton and Masoj, the
two Hun'ett wizards who had died trying to kill Drizzt. Or perhaps the Hun'etts
had come in search of Guenhwyvar, the magical item that Masoj once had
possessed.
When Drizzt took a moment from his pondering to study Guenhwyvar's reaction,
he realized that his assumptions were wrong. The panther had backed away
from him a step and seemed agitated by his stream of suppositions.
"Then who?" Drizzt asked. Guenhwyvar reared up on its hind legs and straddled
Drizzt's shoulders, one great paw patting Drizzt's neck-purse. Not understanding,
Drizzt slipped the item off his neck and emptied its contents into a palm,
revealing a few gold coins, a small gemstone, and the emblem of his house, a
silvery token engraved with the initials of Daermon N'a'shezbaernon, House
Do'Urden. Drizzt realized at once what Guenhwyvar was hinting at. "My family,'
he whispered harshly. Guenhwyvar backed away from him and again scratched
a paw excitedly across the stone.
A thousand memories flooded through Drizzt at that moment, but all of them,
good and bad, led him inescapably to one possibility: Matron Malice had neither
forgiven nor forgotten his actions on that fated day. Drizzt had abandoned her
and the ways of the Spider Queen, and he knew well enough the ways of Lloth to
realize that his actions had not left his mother in good standing.
Drizzt looked back into the gloom of the wide cavern.
"Come,' he panted to Guenhwyvar, and he ran off down the tunnels. His decision
to leave Menzoberranzan had been painful and uncertain, and now Drizzt had no
desire to encounter his kin and rekindle all of the doubts and fears.
He and Guenhwyvar ran on for more than an hour, turning down secret
passageways and crossing into the most confusing sections of the area's
tunnels. Drizzt knew the region intimately and felt certain that he could leave the
patrol group far behind with little effort.
But when at last he paused to catch his breath, Drizzt sensed-and he only had to
look at Guenhwyvar to confirm his suspicions-that the patrol was still on his trail,
perhaps even closer than before.
Drizzt knew then that he was being magically tracked, there could be no other
explanation. "But how?" he asked the panther. "I am hardly the drow they knew
as a brother, in appearance or in thought. What could they be sensing that would
be familiar enough for their magical spells to hold on to?" Drizzt surveyed himself
quickly, his eyes first falling upon his crafted weapons.
The scimitars were indeed wondrous, but so were the majority of the drow
weapons in Menzoberranzan. And these particular blades had not even been
crafted in House Do'Urden and were not of any design favored by Drizzt's family.
His cloak then, he wondered? The piwafwi was a signpost of a house, bearing
the stitch patterns and designs of a single family. But Drizzt's piwafwi had been
tattered and torn beyond recognition and he could hardly believe that a location
spell would recognize it as belonging to House Do'Urden.
"Belonging to House Do'Urden,' Drizzt whispered aloud. He looked at
Guenhwyvar and nodded suddenly-he had his answer. He again removed his
neck pouch and took out the token, the emblem of Daermon N'a'shezbaernon.
Created by magic, it possessed its own magic, a dweomer distinct to that one
house. Only a noble of House Do'Urden would carry one.
Drizzt thought for a moment, then replaced the token and slipped the neck-purse
over Guenhwyvar's head. "Time for the hunted to become the hunter,' he purred
to the great cat.
"He knows he is being followed,' Dinin's hands flashed to Briza. Briza didn't justify
the statement with a reply. Of course Drizzt knew of the pursuit, it was obvious
that he was trying to evade them. Briza remained unconcerned. Drizzt's house
emblem burned as a distinct directional beacon in her magically enhanced
thoughts.
Briza stopped, though, when the party came to a fork in the passage. The signal
came from beyond the fork, but not in any definitive way to either side. "Left,'
Briza signaled to three of the commoner soldiers, then, "Right,' to the remaining
two. She held her brother back, signaling that she and Dinin would hold their
position at the fork to serve as a reserve for both groups.
High above the scattering patrol, hovering in the shadows of the stalactitecovered
ceiling, Drizzt smiled at his cunning. The patrol might have kept pace
with him, but it would have no chance at all of catching Guenhwyvar.
The plan had been executed and completed to perfection, for Drizzt had only
meant to lead the patrol on until it was far from his domain and weary of the
hopeless search. But as Drizzt floated there, looking down upon his brother and
eldest sister, he found himself longing for something more.
A few moments passed, and Drizzt was certain that the dispatched soldiers were
a good distance away. He drew out his scimitars, thinking then that a meeting
with his siblings might not be so bad after all.
"He moves farther away,' Briza spoke to Dinin, not fearing the sound of her own
voice, since she felt certain of her renegade brother's distant position. "At great
speed:'
"Drizzt was always adept in the Underdark,' Dinin replied, nodding. "He will prove
a difficult catch:'
Briza snickered. "He will tire long before my spells expire. We will find him
breathless in a dark hole:' But Briza's cockiness turned to blank amazement a
second later when a dark form dropped right between her and Dinin.
Dinin, too, hardly even registered the shock of it all. He saw Drizzt for just a split
second, then his eyes crisscrossed, following the descending arc of a scimitar's
rushing hilt. Dinin went down heavily, with the smooth stone of the floor pressing
against his cheek, a sensation to which Dinin was oblivious.
Even as one hand did its work on Dinin, Drizzt's other hand shot a scimitar tip
close to Briza's throat, meaning to force her surrender. Briza was not as
surprised as Dinin, though, and she always kept a hand close to her whip. She
danced back from Drizzt's attack, and six snake heads shot up into the air, coiled
and searching for an opening. Drizzt turned full to face her, weaving his scimitars
into defensive patterns to keep the stinging vipers at bay. He remembered the
bite of those dreaded whips, like every drow male, he had been taught it many
times during his childhood.
"Brother Drizzt,' Briza said loudly, hoping the patrol would hear her and
understand the call back to her side. "Lower your weapons. It does not have to
be like this:'
The sound of familiar words, of drow words, overwhelmed Drizzt. How good it
was to hear them again, to remember that he was more than a single-minded
hunter, that his life was more than mere survival.
"Lower your weapons,' Briza said again, more pointedly.
"Wh-why are you here?" Drizzt stammered at her.
"For you, of course, my brother,' Briza replied, too kindly.
"The war with House Hun'ett is, at long last, ended. It is time for you to come
home:'
A part of Drizzt wanted to believe her, wanted to forget those facts of drow life
that had forced him out of the city of his birth. A part of Drizzt wanted to drop the
scimitars to the stone and return to the shelter-and the companionship-of his
former life. Briza's smile was so inviting.
Briza recognized his weakening resolve. "Come home, dear Drizzt,' she purred,
her words holding the bindings of a minor magical spell. "You are needed. You
are the weapon master of House Do'Urden now:'
The sudden change in Drizzt's expression told Briza that she had erred.
Zaknafein, Drizzt's mentor and dearest friend, had been the weapon master of
House Do'Urden, and Zaknafein had been sacrificed to the Spider Queen. Drizzt
would never forget that fact.
Indeed, Drizzt remembered much more than the comforts of home at that
moment. He remembered even more clearly the wrongs of his past life, the
wickedness that his principles simply could not tolerate.
"You should not have come,' Drizzt said, his voice sounding like a growl. "You
must never come this way again!"
"Dear brother,' Briza replied, more to buy time than to correct her obvious error.
She stood still, her face frozen in that double-edged smile of hers.
Drizzt looked behind Briza's lips, which were thick and full by drow standards.
The priestess spoke no words, but Drizzt could clearly see that her mouth was
moving behind that frozen smile.
A spell!
Briza had always been skilled at such deceptions..."Go home!" Drizzt cried at
her, and he launched an attack.
Briza ducked away from the blow easily enough, for it was not meant to strike,
only to disrupt her spellcasting.
"Damn you, Drizzt the rogue,' she spat, all pretense of friendship gone. "Lower
your weapons at once, on pain of death!" Her snake-whip came up in open
threat.
Drizzt set his feet wide apart. Fires burned in his lavender eyes as the hunter
within him rose to meet the challenge.
Briza hesitated, taken aback by the sudden ferocity brewing in her brother. This
was no ordinary drow warrior standing before her, she knew beyond doubt. Drizzt
had become something more than that, something more formidable.
But Briza was a high priestess of Lloth, near the top of the drow hierarchy. She
would not be frightened away by a mere male.
"Surrender!" she demanded. Drizzt couldn't even decipher her words, for the
hunter standing against Briza was no longer Drizzt Do'Urden. The savage, primal
warrior that memories of dead Zaknafein had invoked was impervious to words
and lies.
Briza's arm pumped, and the whip's six viper heads whirled in, twisting and
weaving of their own volition to gain the best angles of attack.
The hunter's scimitars responded in an indistinguishable blur. Briza couldn't
begin to follow their lightning-quick motions, and when her attack routine was
ended, she knew only that none of the snake-heads had found a mark, but that
only five of the heads remained attached to the whip.
Now in rage that nearly matched her opponent's, Briza charged in, flailing away
with her damaged weapon. Snakes and scimitars and slender drow limbs
intertwined in a deadly ballet.
A head bit into the hunter's leg, sending a burst of cold pain coursing through his
veins. A scimitar defeated another deceptive attack, splitting a head down the
middle, right between the fangs.
Another head bit into the hunter. Another head fell free to the stone.
The opponents separated, taking measure of each other. Briza's breath came
hard after the few furious minutes, but the hunter's chest moved easily and
rhythmically. Briza had not been struck, but Drizzt had taken two hits.
The hunter had learned long ago to ignore pain, though. He stood ready to
continue, and Briza, her whip now sporting only three heads, stubbornly came in
on him. She hesitated for a split-second when she noticed Dinin still prone on the
floor but with his senses apparently returning. Might her brother rise to her aid?
Dinin squirmed and tried to stand but found no strength in his legs to lift him.
"Damn you,' Briza growled, her venom aimed at Dinin, or at Drizzt-it didn't matter.
Calling on the power of her Spider Queen deity, the high priestess of Lloth lashed
out with all of her strength.
Three snake heads dropped to the floor after a single cross of the hunter's
blades.
"Damn you!" Briza screamed again, this time pointedly at Drizzt. She grasped the
mace from her belt and swung a vicious overhand chop at her defiant brother's
head.
Crossed scimitars caught the clumsy blow long before it found its mark, and the
hunter's foot came up and kicked once, twice, and then a third time into Briza's
face before it went back to the floor.
Briza staggered backward, blood in her eyes and running freely from her nose.
She made out the lines of her brother's form beyond the blurring heat of her own
blood, and she launched a desperate, wide-arcing hook.
The hunter set one scimitar to parry the mace, turning its blade so that Briza's
hand ran down its cruel edge even as the mace swept wide of its mark. Briza
screamed in agony and dropped her weapon.
The mace fell to the floor beside two of her fingers. Dinin was up then, behind
Drizzt, with his sword in his hand. Using all of her discipline, Briza kept her eyes
locked on Drizzt, holding his attention. If she could distract him long enough. . .
The hunter sensed the danger and spun on Dinin.
All that Dinin saw in his brother's lavender eyes was his own death. He threw his
sword to the ground and crossed his arms over his chest in surrender.
The hunter issued a growling command, hardly intelligible, but Dinin fathomed its
meaning well enough, and he ran away as fast as his legs could carry him.
Briza started to slip around, meaning to follow Dinin, but a scimitar blade cut her
off, locking under her chin and forcing her head so far back that all she could see
was the dark stone of the ceiling.
Pain burned in the hunter's limbs, pain inflicted by this one and her evil whip.
Now the hunter meant to end the pain and the threat. This was his domain!
Briza uttered a final prayer to Lloth as she felt the razor-sharp edge begin its cut.
But then, in the instant of a black blur, she was free. She looked down to see
Drizzt pinned to the floor by a huge black panther. Not taking the time to ask
questions, Briza sped off down the tunnel after Dinin.
The hunter squirmed away from Guenhwyvar and leaped to his feet.
"Guenhwyvar!" he cried, pushing the panther away. "Get her! Kill . . . !"
Guenhwyvar replied by falling into a sitting position and issuing a wide and drawn
out yawn. With one lazy movement, the panther brought a paw under the string
of the neck-purse and snapped it off to the ground.
The hunter burned with rage. "What are you doing?" he screamed, snatching up
the purse. Had Guenhwyvar sided against him? Drizzt backed away a step,
hesitantly bringing his scimitars up between him and the panther. Guenhwyvar
made no move, but just sat there staring at Drizzt.
A moment later, the click of a crossbow told Drizzt of the absolute absurdity of his
line of thinking. The dart would have found him, no doubt, but Guenhwyvar
sprang up suddenly and intercepted its flight. Drow poison had no effect on the
likes of a magical cat.
Three drow fighters appeared on one side of the fork, two more on the other. All
thoughts of revenge on Briza flew from Drizzt then, and he followed Guenhwyvar
in full flight down the twisting passageways. Without the guidance of the high
priestess and her magic, the commoner fighters did not even attempt to follow.
A long while later, Drizzt and Guenhwyvar turned into a side passage and
paused in their flight, listening for any sounds of pursuit.
"Come:' Drizzt instructed, and he started slowly away, certain that the threat of
Dinin and Briza had been successfully repelled.
Again Guenhwyvar dropped to a sitting position.
Drizzt looked curiously at the panther. "I told you to come:' he growled.
Guenhwyvar fixed a stare upon him, a look that filled the renegade drow with
guilt. Then the cat rose and walked slowly toward its master.
Drizzt nodded his accord, thinking that Guenhwyvar meant to obey him. He
turned and started again to walk off, but the panther circled around him, stopping
his progress. Guenhwyvar continued the circular pacing and slowly the telltale
mist began to appear.
"What are you doing?" Drizzt demanded.
Guenhwyvar did not slow.
"I did not dismiss you!" Drizzt shouted as the panther's corporeal form melted
away. Drizzt spun about frantically, trying to catch hold of something.
"I did not dismiss you!" he cried again, helplessly.
Guenhwyvar had gone.
It was a long walk back to Drizzt's sheltered cave. That last image of
Guenhwyvar followed his every step, the cat's saucer eyes boring into his back.
Guenhwyvar had judged him, he realized beyond any doubt. In his blind rage,
Drizzt had almost killed his sister, he surely would have slain Briza if Guenhwyvar
had not pounced upon him. At last, Drizzt crawled into the little stone cubby that
served as his bedroom.
His contemplations crawled in with him. A decade before, Drizzt had killed Masoj
Hun'ett, and on that occasion had vowed never to kill a drow again. For Drizzt,
his word was the core of his principles, those very same principles that had
forced him to give up so very much.
Drizzt surely would have forsaken his word this day had it not been for
Guenhwyvar's actions. How much better, then, was he from those dark elves he
had left behind?
Drizzt clearly had won the encounter against his siblings and was confident that
he could continue to hide from Briza-and from all the other enemies that Matron
Malice sent against him. But alone in that tiny cave, Drizzt realized something
that distressed him greatly.
He couldn't hide from himself.
CHAPTER 4
Flight From The Hunter
Drizzt gave no thought at all to his actions as he went about his daily routines
over the next few days. He would survive, he knew. The hunter would have it no
other way. But the rising price of that survival struck a deep and discordant note
in the heart of Drizzt Do'Urden.
If the constant rituals of the day warded away the pain, Drizzt found himself
unprotected at day's end. The encounter with his siblings haunted him, stayed in
his thoughts as vividly as if it were recurring every night. Inevitably, Drizzt awoke
terrified and alone, engulfed by the monsters of his dreams. He understood-and
the knowledge heightened his helplessness-that no swordplay, however dazzling,
could hope to defeat them.
Drizzt did not fear that his mother would continue her quest to capture and
punish him, though he knew beyond any doubt that she certainly would. This was
his world, far different from Menzoberranzan's winding avenues, with ways that
the drow living in the city could not begin to understand. Out in the wilds, Drizzt
held confidence that he could survive against whatever nemeses Matron Malice
sent after him.
Drizzt also had managed to release himself from the overwhelming guilt of his
actions against Briza. He rationalized that it was his siblings who had forced the
dangerous encounter, and it was Briza, in trying to cast a spell, who had initiated
the combat. Still, Drizzt realized that he would spend many days finding answers
to the questions his actions had raised concerning the nature of his character.
Had he become this savage and merciless hunter because of the harsh
conditions imposed on him? Or was this hunter an expression of the being Drizzt
had been all along? They were not questions that Drizzt would easily answer,
but, at this time, they were not foremost among his thoughts.
The thing that Drizzt could not dismiss about the encounter with his siblings was
the sound of their voices, the melody of spoken words that he could understand
and respond to. In all of his recollections of those few moments with Briza and
Dinin, the words, not the blows, stood out most clearly. Drizzt clung to them
desperately, listening to them over and over again in his mind and dreading the
day when they would fade away. Then, though he might remember them, he
would no longer hear them.
He would be alone again.
Drizzt pulled the onyx figurine out of his pocket for the first time since
Guenhwyvar had drifted away from him. He placed it on the stone before him and
looked at his wall scratches to determine just how long it had been since he had
last summoned the panther. Immediately, Drizzt realized the futility of that
approach. When was the last time he had scratched that wall? And what use
were the markings anyway? How could Drizzt be certain of his count even if he
dutifully notched the mark after every one of his sleep periods?
"Time is something of that other world,' Drizzt mumbled, his tone clearly a
lament. He lifted his dagger toward the stone, an act of denial against his own
proclamation.
"What does it matter?" Drizzt asked rhetorically, and he dropped the dagger to
the ground. The ring as it struck the stone sent a shiver along Drizzt's spine, as
though it was a bell signaling his surrender.
His breathing came hard. Sweat beaded on his ebony brow, and his hands felt
suddenly cold. All around him, the walls of his cave, the close stone that had
sheltered him for years against the ever-encroaching dangers of the Underdark,
now pressed in on him. He imagined leering faces in the lines of cracks and the
shapes of rocks. The faces mocked him and laughed at him, belittling his
stubborn pride.
He turned to flee but stumbled on a stone and fell to the ground. He scraped a
knee in the process and tore yet another hole in his tattered piwafwi. Drizzt
hardly cared for his knee or his cloak when he looked back to the stumbling
stone, for another fact assailed him, leaving him in utter confusion.
The hunter had tripped. For the first time in more than a decade, the hunter had
tripped!
"Guenhwyvar!" Drizzt cried frantically. "Come to me! Oh, please, my
Guenhwyvar!"
He didn't know if the panther would respond. After their last less-than-friendly
parting, Drizzt couldn't be certain that Guenhwyvar would ever walk by his side
again. Drizzt clawed his way toward the figurine, every inch seeming a tedious
fight in the weakness of his despair.
Presently the swirling mist appeared. The panther would not desert its master,
would not hold lasting judgment against the drow who had been its friend.
Drizzt relaxed as the mist took form, using the sight of it to block the evil
hallucinations in the stones. Soon Guenhwyvar was sitting beside him and
casually licking at one great paw. Drizzt locked the panther's saucer eyes in a
stare and saw no judgment there. It was just Guenhwyvar, his friend and his
salvation.
Drizzt curled his legs under him, sprang out to the cat, and wrapped the muscled
neck in a tight and desperate embrace. Guenhwyvar accepted the hold without
response, wiggling loose only enough to continue the paw-licking. If the cat, in its
otherworldly intelligence, understood the importance of that hug, it offered no
outward signs.
Restlessness marked Drizzt's next days. He kept on the move, running the
circuits of the tunnels around his sanctuary. Matron Malice was after him, he
continually reminded himself. He could not afford any holes in his defenses.
Deep inside himself, beyond the rationalizations, Drizzt knew the truth of his
movements. He could offer himself the excuse of patrolling, but he had, in fact,
taken flight. He ran from the voices and the walls of his small cave. He ran from
Drizzt Do'Urden and back toward the hunter.
Gradually, his routes took a wider course, often keeping him from his cave for
many days at a stretch. Secretly, Drizzt hoped for an encounter with a powerful
foe. He needed a tangible reminder of the necessity of his primal existence, a
battle against some horrid monster that would place him in a mode of purely
instinctive survival.
What Drizzt found instead one day was the vibration of a distant tapping on the
wall, the rhythmical, measured tap of a miner's pick.
Drizzt leaned back against the wall and carefully considered his next move. He
knew where the sound would lead him, he was in the same tunnels that he had
wandered when he went in search of his lost rothe, the same tunnels where he
had encountered the svirfneblin mining party a few weeks before. At that time,
Drizzt could not admit it to himself, but it was no simple coincidence that he had
happened into this region again. His subconscious had brought him to hear the
tapping of the svirfneblin hammers, and, more particularly, to hear the laughter
and chatter of the deep gnomes' voices.
Now Drizzt, leaning heavily against a wall, truly was torn. He knew that going to
spy on the svirfneblin miners would only bring him more torment, that in hearing
their voices he would become even more vulnerable to the pangs of loneliness.
The deep gnomes surely would go back to their city, and Drizzt again would be
left empty and alone.
But Drizzt had come to hear the tapping, and now it vibrated in the stone,
beckoning him with a pull too great to ignore. His better judgment fought the
urges that pulled him toward that sound, but his decision had been made even as
he had taken the first steps into this region. He berated himself for his
foolishness, shook his head in denial. In spite of his conscious reasoning, his
legs were moving, carrying him toward the rhythmic sound of the tapping
pickaxes.
The alert instincts of the hunter argued against remaining near the miners even
as Drizzt looked down from a high ledge upon the group of svirfnebli. But Drizzt
did not leave. For several days, as far as he could measure, he stayed in the
vicinity of the deep gnome miners, catching bits of their conversations wherever
he could, watching them at work and at play. .
When the inevitable day came that the miners began to pack up their wagons,
Drizzt understood the depth of his folly. He had been weak in coming to the deep
gnomes, he had denied the brutal truth of his existence. Now he would have to
go back to his dark and empty hole, all the more lonely for the memories of the
last few days.
The wagons rolled out of sight down the tunnels toward the svirfneblin city. Drizzt
took the first steps back toward his sanctuary, the moss-covered cave with the
fast-running stream and the myconid-tended mushroom grove.
In all the centuries of life he had left to live, Drizzt Do'Urden would never look
upon that place again.
He did not later remember when his direction had turned, it had not been a
conscious decision. Something pulled at him-the lingering rumble of the ore-filled
wagons perhaps-and only when Drizzt heard the slam of Blingdenstone's great
outer doors did he realize what he meant to do.
"Guenhwyvar,' Drizzt whispered to the figurine, and he flinched at the disturbing
volume of his own voice. The svirfneblin guards on the wide staircase were
engaged in a conversation of their own, though, and Drizzt was quite safe.
The gray mist swirled around the statuette and the panther came to its master's
call. Guenhwyvar's ears flattened and the panther sniffed around cautiously,
trying to resolve the unfamiliar setting.
Drizzt took a deep breath and forced the words from his mouth. "I wanted to say
good-bye to you, my friend,' he whispered. Guenhwyvar's ears came up straight,
and the pupils of the cat's shining yellow eyes widened then narrowed again as
Guenhwyvar took a quick study of Drizzt.
"In case...:' Drizzt continued. "I cannot live out there anymore, Guenhwyvar. I fear
I am losing everything that gives meaning to life. I fear I am losing my self. He
glanced back over his shoulder at the ascending stairway to Blingdenstone. "And
that is more precious to me than my life. Can you understand, Guenhwyvar? I
need more, more than simple survival. I need a life defined by more than the
savage instincts of this creature I have become:'
Drizzt slumped back against the passageway's stone wall. His words sounded so
logical and simple, yet he knew that every step up that stair to the deep gnome
city would be a trial of his courage and his convictions. He remembered the day
he'd stood on the ledge outside Blingdenstone's great doors. As much as he
wanted to, Drizzt could not bring himself to follow the deep gnomes in. He was
fully caught in a very real paralysis that had gripped him and held him firmly
when he thought of rushing through the portals into the deep gnome city.
"You have rarely judged me, my friend,' Drizzt said to the panther. "And in those
times, always you have judged me fairly. Can you understand, Guenhwyvar? In
the next few moments, we may become lost from each other forever. Can you
understand why I must do this?"
Guenhwyvar padded over to Drizzt's side and nuzzled its great feline head into
the drow's ribs.
"My friend,' Drizzt whispered into the cat's ear. "Go back now before I lose my
courage. Go back to your home and hope that we shall meet again:' Guenhwyvar
turned away obediently and paced to the figurine. The transition seemed too fast
to Drizzt this time, then only the figurine remained. Drizzt scooped it up and
considered it. He considered again the risk before him.
Then, driven by the same subconscious needs that had brought him this far,
Drizzt rushed to the stair and started up. Above him, the deep gnome
conversation had ceased, apparently the guards sensed that someone or
something was approaching.
But the svirfneblin guards' surprise was no less when a drow elf walked over the
top of the staircase and onto the landing before the doors of their city.
Drizzt crossed his arms over his chest, a defenseless gesture that the drow elves
took as a signal of truce. Drizzt could only hope that the svirfnebli were familiar
with the motion, for his mere appearance had absolutely unnerved the guards.
They fell over each other, scrambling around the small landing, some rushing to
protect the doors to the city, others surrounding Drizzt within a ring of weapon
tips, and still others rushing frantically to the stairs and down a few, trying to see
if this dark elf was just the first of an entire drow war party.
One svirfneblin, the leader of the guard contingent and apparently looking for
some explanation, barked out a series of pointed demands at Drizzt. Drizzt
shrugged helplessly, and the half-dozen deep gnomes around him jumped back
a cautious step at his innocuous movement.
The svirfneblin spoke again, more loudly, and jabbed the very sharp point of his
iron spear in Drizzt's direction. Drizzt could not begin to understand or respond to
the foreign tongue. Very slowly and in obvious view, he slid one hand down over
his stomach to the clasp of his belt buckle. The deep gnome leader's hands
wrung tightly over the shaft of his weapon as he watched the dark elf's every
movement.
A flick of Drizzt's wrist released the clasp and his scimitars clanged loudly on the
stone floor.
The svirfnebli jumped in unison, then recovered quickly and came in on him. On
a single word from the leader of the group, two of the guards dropped their
weapons and began a complete, and not overly gentle, search of the intruder.
Drizzt flinched when they found the dagger he had kept in his boot. He thought
himself stupid for forgetting the weapon and not revealing it openly from the
beginning.
A moment later, when one of the svirfnebli reached into the deepest pocket of
Drizzt's piwafwi and pulled out the onyx figurine, Drizzt flinched even more.
Instinctively, Drizzt reached for the panther, a pleading expression on his face.
He received the butt end of a spear in the back for his efforts. Deep gnomes
were not an evil race, but they held no love for dark elves. The svirfnebli had
survived for centuries untold in the Underdark with few allies but many enemies,
and they ever ranked the drow elves as foremost among the latter. Since the
founding of the ancient city of Blingdenstone, the majority of all of the many
svirfnebli who had been killed in the wilds had fallen at the ends of drow
weapons.
Now, inexplicably, one of these same dark elves had walked right up to their city
doors and willingly surrendered his weapons.
The deep gnomes bound Drizzt's hands tightly behind his back, and four of the
guards kept their weapon tips resting on him, ready to drive them home at
Drizzt's slightest threatening movement. The remaining guards returned from
their search of the stairway, reporting no other drow elves anywhere in the
vicinity. The leader remained suspicious, though, and he posted guards at
various strategic positions, then motioned to the two deep gnomes waiting at the
city's doors.
The massive portals parted, and Drizzt was led in. He could only hope in that
moment of fear and excitement that he had left the hunter out in the wilds of the
Underdark.
CHAPTER 5
UNHOLY ALLY
In no hurry to stand before his outraged mother, Dinin wandered slowly toward
the anteroom to House Do'Urden's chapel. Matron Malice had called for him, and
he could not refuse the summons. He found Vierna and Maya in the corridor
beyond the ornate doors, similarly tentative.
"What is it about?" Dinin asked his sisters in the silent hand code.
"Matron Malice has been with Briza and Shi'nayne all the day:' Vierna's hands
replied.
"Planning another expedition in search of Drizzt:' Dinin motioned halfheartedly,
not liking the idea that he would no doubt be included in such plans.
The two females did not miss their brother's disdainful scowl.
"Was it really so terrible?" Maya asked. "Briza would say little about it:'
"Her severed fingers and torn whip revealed much,' Vierna put in, a wry smile
crossing her face as she motioned. Vierna, like every other sibling of House
Do'Urden, had little love for her eldest sister.
No agreeing smile spread on Dinin's face as he remembered his encounter with
Drizzt. "You witnessed our brother's prowess when he lived among us:' Dinin's
hands replied. "His skills have improved tenfold in his years outside the city:'
"But what was he like?" Vierna asked, obviously intrigued by Drizzt's ability to
survive. Ever since the patrol had returned with the report that Drizzt was still
alive, Vierna had secretly hoped that she would see her younger brother again.
They had shared a father, it was said, and Vierna held more sympathy for Drizzt
than was wise, given Malice's feelings for him.
Noticing her excited expression, and remembering his own humiliation at Drizzt's
hands, Dinin cast a disapproving scowl at her. "Fear not, dear sister,' Dinin's
hands said quickly. "If Malice sends you out into the wilds this time, as I suspect
she will, you will see all of Drizzt you wish to see, and more!" Dinin clapped his
hands together for emphasis as he ended, and he strode right between the two
females and through the anteroom's door.
"Your brother has forgotten how to knock,' Matron Malice said to Briza and
Shi'nayne, who stood at her sides.
Rizzen, kneeling before the throne, looked up over his shoulder to see Dinin.
"I did not give you permission to lift your eyes!" Malice screamed at the patron.
She pounded her fist on the arm of her great throne, and Rizzen fell down to his
belly in fear. Malice's next words carried the strength of a spell.
"Grovel!" she commanded, and Rizzen crawled to her feet. Malice extended her
hand to the male, all the while looking straight at Dinin. The elderboy did not miss
his mother's point.
"Kiss,' she said to Rizzen, and he quickly began lavishing kisses onto her
extended hand. "Stand,' Malice issued her third command.
Rizzen got about halfway to his feet before the matron punched him squarely in
the face, dropping him in a heap to the stone floor.
"If you move, I shall kill you,' Malice promised, and Rizzen lay perfectly still, not
doubting her in the least. Dinin knew that the continued show had been more for
his benefit than for Rizzen's. Still, unblinking, Malice eyed him.
"You have failed me,' she said at length. Dinin accepted the berating without
argument, without even daring to breathe until Malice turned sharply on Briza.
"And you!" Malice shouted. "Six trained drow warriors beside you, and you, a
high priestess, could not bring Drizzt back to me:'
Briza clenched and unclenched the weakened fingers that Malice had magically
restored to her hand.
"Seven against one,' Malice ranted, "and you come running back here with tales
of doom!"
"I will get him, Matron Mother,' Maya promised as she took her place beside
Shi'nayne. Malice looked to Vierna, but the second daughter was more reluctant
to make such grand claims.
"You speak boldly,' Dinin said to Maya. Immediately, Malice's disbelieving
grimace fell upon him in a harsh reminder that it was not his place to speak.
But Briza promptly completed Dinin's thought. "Too boldly,' she growled. Malice's
gaze descended upon her on cue, but Briza was a high priestess in the favor of
the Spider Queen and was well within her rights to speak. "You know nothing of
our young brother,' Briza went on, speaking as much to Malice as to Maya.
"He is only a male,' Maya retorted. "I would-"
"You would be cut down!" Briza yelled. "Hold your foolish words and empty
promises, youngest sister. Out in the tunnels beyond Menzoberranzan, Drizzt
would kill you with little effort:'
Malice listened intently to it all. She had heard Briza's account of the meeting
with Drizzt several times, and she knew enough about her oldest daughter's
courage and powers to understand that Briza did not speak falsely.
Maya backed down from the confrontation, not wanting any part of a feud with
Briza.
"Could you defeat him,' Malice asked Briza, "now that you better understand
what he has become?"
In response, Briza flexed her wounded hand again. It would be several weeks
before she regained full use of the replaced fingers.
"Or you?" Malice asked Dinin, understanding Briza's pointed gesture as a
conclusive answer.
Dinin fidgeted about, not knowing how to respond to his volatile mother. The truth
might put him at odds with Malice, but a lie surely would land him back in the
tunnels against his brother.
"Speak truly with me!" Malice roared. "Do you wish another hunt for Drizzt, so
that you may regain my favor?"
"I . . :' Dinin stuttered, then he lowered his eyes defensively. Malice had put a
detection spell on his reply, Dinin realized. She would know if he tried to lie to
her. "No,' he said flatly. "Even at the cost of your favor, Matron Mother, I do not
wish to go out after Drizzt again:'
Maya and Vierna-even Shi'nayne-started in surprise at the honest response,
thinking nothing could be worse than a matron mother's wrath. Briza, though,
nodded in agreement, for she, too, had seen as much of Drizzt as she cared to
see. Malice did not miss the significance of her daughter's motion.
"Your pardon, Matron Mother,' Dinin went on, trying desperately to heal any ill
feelings he had stirred. "I have seen Drizzt in combat. He took me down too
easily-as I believed that no foe ever could. He defeated Briza fairly, and I have
never seen her beaten! I do not wish to hunt my brother again, for I fear that the
result would only bring more anger to you and more trouble to House Do'Urden:'
"You are afraid?" Malice asked slyly.
Dinin nodded. "And I know that I would only disappoint you again, Matron
Mother. In the tunnels that he names as home, Drizzt is beyond my skills. I
cannot hope to outdo him".
"I can accept such cowardice in a male,' Malice said coldly. Dinin, with no
recourse, accepted the insult stoically.
"But you are a high priestess of Lloth!" Malice taunted Briza. "Certainly a rogue
male is not beyond the powers that the Spider Queen has given to you!"
"Hear Dinin's words, my matron,' Briza replied.
"Lloth is with you!" Shi'nayne shouted at her.
"But Drizzt is beyond the Spider Queen,' Briza snapped back. "I fear that Dinin
speaks the truth-for all of us. We cannot catch Drizzt out there. The wilds of the
Underdark are his domain, where we are only strangers.'
"Then what are we to do?" Maya grumbled.
Malice rested back in her throne and put her sharp chin in her palm. She had
coaxed Dinin under the weight of a threat, and yet he still declared that he would
not willingly venture after Drizzt. Briza, ambitious and powerful, and in the favor
of Lloth even if House Do'Urden and Matron Malice were not, came back without
her prized whip and the fingers of one hand.
"Jarlaxle and his band of rogues?" Vierna offered, seeing her mother's dilemma.
"Bregan D'aerthe has been of value to us for many years?'
"The mercenary leader will not agree,' Malice replied, for she had tried to hire the
soldier of fortune for the endeavor years before. "Every member of Bregan
D'aerthe abides by the decisions of Jarlaxle, and all the wealth we possess will
not tempt him. I suspect that Jarlaxle is under the strict orders of Matron Baenre.
Drizzt is our problem, and we are charged by the Spider Queen with correcting
that problem.'
"If you command me to go, I shall:' Dinin spoke out. "I fear only that I will
disappoint you, Matron Mother. I do not fear Drizzt's blades, or death itself if it is
in service to you.' Dinin had read his mother's dark mood well enough to know
that she had no intention of sending him back out after Drizzt, and he thought
himself wise in being so generous when it didn't cost him anything.
"I thank you, my son:' Malice beamed at him. Dinin had to hold his snicker when
he noticed all three of his sisters glaring at him. "Now leave us:' Malice continued
condescendingly, stealing Dinin's moment. "We have business that does not
concern a male.'
Dinin bowed low and swept toward the door. His sisters took note of how easily
Malice had stolen the proud spring from his step.
"I will remember your words,' Malice said wryly, enjoying the power play and the
silent applause. Dinin paused, his hand on the handle of the ornate door. "One
day you will prove your loyalty to me, do not doubt.'
All five of the high priestesses laughed at Dinin's back as he rushed out of the
room.
On the floor, Rizzen found himself in quite a dangerous dilemma. Malice had
sent Dinin away, saying in essence that males had no right to remain in the
room. Yet Malice had not given Rizzen permission to move. He planted his feet
and fingers against the stone, ready to spring away in an instant.
Are you still here?" Malice shrieked at him. Rizzen bolted for the door.
"Hold!" Malice cried at him, her words once again empowered by a magical spell.
Rizzen stopped suddenly, against his better judgment and unable to resist the
dweomer of Matron Malice's spell.
"I did not give you permission to move!" Malice screamed behind him.
"But-" Rizzen started to protest.
"Take him!" Malice commanded her two youngest daughters, and Vierna and
Maya rushed over and roughly grabbed Rizzen.
"Put him in a dungeon cell,' Malice instructed them. "Keep him alive. We will
need him later:'
Vierna and Maya hauled the trembling male out of the anteroom. Rizzen did not
dare offer any resistance.
"You have a plan,' Shi'nayne said to Malice. As SiNafay, the matron mother of
House Hun'ett, the newest Do'Urden had learned to see purpose in every action.
She knew the duties of a matron mother well and understood that Malice's
outburst against Rizzen, who had in fact done nothing wrong, was more of
calculated design than of true outrage.
"I agree with your assessment,' Malice said to Briza. "Drizzt has gone beyond us:'
"But by the words of Matron Baenre herself, we must not fail,' Briza reminded her
mother. "Your seat on the ruling council must be strengthened at all cost:'
"We shall not fail,' Shi'nayne said to Briza, eyeing Malice all the while. Another
wry look came across Malice's face as Shi'nayne continued. "In ten years of
battle against House Do'Urden,' she said, "I have come to understand the
methods of Matron Malice. Your mother will find a way to catch Drizzt:' She
paused, noting her "mother's" widening smile. "Or has she, perhaps, already
found a way?"
"We shall see,' Malice purred, her confidence growing in her former rival's decree
of respect. "We shall see:'
More than two hundred commoners of House Do'Urden milled about the great
chapel, excitedly exchanging rumors of the coming events. Commoners were
rarely allowed in this sacred place, only on the high holidays of Lloth or in
communal prayer before a battle. Yet there were no expectations among them of
any impending war, and this was no holy day on the drow calendar.
Dinin Do'Urden, also anxious and excited, moved about the crowd, settling dark
elves into the rows of seats encircling the raised central dais. Being only a male,
Dinin would not partake of the ceremony at the altar and Matron Malice had told
him nothing of her plans. From the instructions she had given him, though, Dinin
knew that the results of this day's events would prove critical to the future of his
family. He was the chant leader, he would continually move throughout the
assembly, leading the commoners in the appropriate verses to the Spider Queen.
Dinin had played this role often before, but this time Matron Malice had warned
him that if a single voice called out incorrectly, Dinin's life would be forfeit. Still
another fact disturbed the elderboy of House Do'Urden. He was normally
accompanied in his chapel duties by the other male noble of the house, Malice's
present mate. Rizzen had not been seen since that day when the whole family
had gathered in the anteroom. Dinin suspected that Rizzen's reign as patron
soon would come to a crashing end. It was no secret that Matron Malice had
given previous mates to Lloth.
When all of the commoners were seated, magical red lights began to glow softly
all about the room. The illumination increased gradually, allowing the gathered
dark elves to comfortably shift their dual-purpose eyes from the infrared spectrum
into the realm of light.
Misty vapors rolled out from under the seats, hugged the floor, and rose in curling
wisps. Dinin led the crowd in a low hum, the calling of Matron Malice.
Malice appeared at the top of the room's domed ceiling, her arms outstretched
and the folds of her spider-emblazoned black robes whipping about in an
enchanted breeze. She descended slowly, turning complete circuits to survey the
gathering-and to let them look upon the splendor that was their matron mother.
When Malice alighted on the central dais, Briza and Shi'nayne appeared on the
ceiling, floating down in similar fashion. They landed and took their places, Briza
at the cloth-covered case off to the side of the spider-shaped sacrificial table and
Shi'nayne behind Matron Malice.
Malice clapped her hands and the humming stopped abruptly. Eight braziers
lining the central dais roared to life, their flames' brightness less painful to the
sensitive drow eyes in the red, mist-enshrouded glow.
"Enter, my daughters!,' Malice cried, and all heads turned to the chapel's main
doors. Vierna and Maya came in, with Rizzen, sluggish and apparently drugged,
supported between them and a casket floating in the air behind them.
Dinin, among others, thought this an odd arrangement. He could assume, he
supposed, that Rizzen was to be sacrificed, but he had never heard of a coffin
being brought in to the ceremony.
The younger Do'Urden daughters moved up to the central dais and quickly
strapped Rizzen down to the sacrificial table. Shi'nayne intercepted the floating
casket and guided it to a position off to the side opposite Briza.
"Call to the handmaiden!" Malice cried, and Dinin immediately sent the gathering
into the desired chant. The braziers roared higher, Malice and the other high
priestesses prodded the crowd on with magically enhanced shouts of key words
in the summoning. A sudden wind came up from nowhere, it seemed, and
whipped the mist into a frenzied dance.
The flames of all eight braziers shot out in high lines over Malice and the others,
joining in a furious burst above the center of the circular platform. The braziers
puffed once in a unified explosion, throwing the last of their flames into the
summoning, then burned low as the lines of fire rolled together in a gathered ball
and became a singular pillar of flame.
The commoners gasped but continued their chanting as the pillar rolled through
the colors of the spectrum, gradually cooling until the flames were no more. In
their place stood a tentacled creature, taller than a drow elf and resembling a
half-melted candle with elongated, drooping facial features. All the crowd
recognized the being, though few commoners had ever actually seen one before,
except perhaps in illustrations in the clerical books. All in attendance knew well
enough the importance of this gathering at that moment, for no drow could
possibly miss the significance of the presence of a yochlol, a personal
handmaiden of Lloth.
"Greetings, Handmaiden,' Malice said loudly. "Blessed is Daermon
N'a'shezbaernon for your presence:'
The yochlol surveyed the gathering for a long while, surprised that House
Do'Urden had issued such a summons. Matron Malice was not in the favor of
Lloth.
Only the high priestesses felt the telepathic question. Why dare you call to me?
"To right our wrongs!" Malice cried out aloud, drawing the whole of the gathering
into the tense moment. "To regain the favor of your Mistress, the favor that is the
only purpose of our existence!" Malice looked pointedly at Dinin, and he began
the correct song, the highest song of praise to the Spider Queen.
I am pleased by your display, Matron Malice, came the yochlol's thoughts, this
time directed solely at Malice. But you know that this gathering does nothing to
aid in your
peril!
This is but the beginning, Malice answered mentally, confident that the
handmaiden could read her every thought. The matron took comfort in that
knowledge, for she held faith that her desires to regain the favor of Lloth were
sincere. My youngest son has wronged the Spider Queen. He must pay for his
deeds.
The other high priestesses, excluded from the telepathic conversation, joined in
the song to Lloth.
Drizzt Do'Urden lives, the yochlol reminded Malice. And he is not in your custody.
That shall soon be corrected, Malice promised.
What do you desire of me?
"Zin-carla!" Malice cried aloud.
The yochlol swayed backward, momentarily stunned by the boldness of the
request. Malice held her ground, determined that her plan would not fail. Around
her, the other priestesses held their breath, fully realizing that the moment of
triumph or disaster was upon them all.
It is our highest gift, came the yochlol's thoughts, given rarely even to matrons in
the favor of the Spider Queen. And you, who have not pleased Lloth, dare to ask
for Zin-carla?
It is right and fitting, Malice replied. Then aloud, needing the support of her
family, she cried, "Let my youngest son learn the folly of his ways and the power
of the enemies he has made. Let my son witness the horrible glory of Lloth
revealed, so that he will fall to his knees and beg forgiveness!" Malice reverted to
telepathic communication. Only then shall the spirit-wraith drive a sword into his
heart!
The yochlol's eyes went blank as the creature fell into itself, seeking guidance
from its home plane of existence. Many minutes-agonizing minutes to Matron
Malice and all of the hushed gathering-passed before the yochlol's thoughts
came back. Have you the corpse?
Malice signaled to Maya and Vierna, and they rushed over to the casket and
removed the stone lid. Dinin understood then that the box was not brought for
Rizzen, but was already occupied. An animated corpse crawled out of it and
staggered over to Malice's side. It was badly decomposed and many of its
features had rotted away altogether, but Dinin and most of the others in the great
chapel recognized it immediately: Zaknafein Do'Urden, the legendary weapon
master.
Zin-carla, the yochlol asked, so that the weapon master you gave to the Spider
Queen might correct the wrongs of your youngest son?
It is appropriate, Malice replied. She sensed that the yochlol was pleased, as she
had expected. Zaknafein, Drizzt's tutor, had helped to inspire the blasphemous
attitudes that had ruined Drizzt. Lloth, the queen of chaos, enjoyed ironies, and to
have this same Zaknafein serve as executioner would inevitably please her.
Zin-carla requires great sacrifice, came the yochlol's demand. The creature
looked over to the spider-shaped table, where Rizzen lay oblivious to his
surroundings. The yochlol seemed to frown, if such creatures could frown, at the
sight of such a pitiful sacrifice. The creature then turned back to Matron Malice
and read her thoughts.
Do continue, the yochlol prompted, suddenly very interested.
Malice lifted her arms, beginning yet another song to Lloth. She motioned to
Shi'nayne, who walked to the case beside Briza and took out the ceremonial
dagger, the most precious possession of House Do'Urden. Briza flinched when
she saw her newest "sister" handle the item, its hilt the body of a spider with
eight blade like legs reaching down under it. For centuries it had been Briza's
place to drive the ceremonial dagger into the hearts of gifts to the Spider Queen.
Shi'nayne smirked at the eldest daughter as she walked away, sensing Briza's
anger. She joined Malice at the table beside Rizzen and moved the dagger out
over the doomed patron's heart.
Malice grabbed her hands to stop her. "This time I must do it,' Malice explained,
to Shi'nayne's dismay. Shi'nayne looked back over her shoulder to see Briza
returning her smirk tenfold.
Malice waited until the song had ended, and the gathering remained absolutely
silent as Malice alone began the proper chant. "Thkken bres duis bres,' she
began, both her hands wringing over the hilt of the deadly instrument.
A moment later, Malice's chant neared completion and the dagger went up high.
All the house tensed, awaiting the moment of ecstacy, the savage giving to the
foul Spider Queen.
The dagger came down, but Malice turned it abruptly to the side and drove it
instead into the heart of Shi'nayne, Matron SiNafay Hun'ett, her most hated rival.
"No!" gasped SiNafay, but the deed was done. Eight blade-legs grasped at her
heart. SiNafay tried to speak, to cast a spell of healing on herself or a curse upon
Malice, but only blood came out of her mouth. Gasping her last breaths, she fell
forward over Rizzen.
All the house erupted in screams of shock and joy as Malice tore the dagger out
from under SiNafay Hun'ett, and her enemy's heart along with it. "Devious!" Briza
screamed above the tumult, for even she had not known Malice's plans. Once
again, Briza was the eldest daughter of House Do'Urden, back in the position of
honor that she so dearly craved.
Devious! the yochlol echoed in Malice's mind. Know that we are pleased!
Behind the gruesome scene, the animated corpse fell limply to the floor. Malice
looked at the handmaiden and understood. "Put Zaknafein on the table! Quickly!"
she instructed her younger daughters. They scrambled about, roughly displacing
Rizzen and SiNafay and getting Zaknafein's body in place.
Briza, too, went into motion, carefully lining up the many jars of unguents that
had been painstakingly prepared for this moment. Matron Malice's reputation as
the finest salve maker in the city would be put to the test in this effort.
Malice looked at the yochlol. "Zin-carla?" she asked aloud.
You have not regained the favor of Lloth! came the telepathic reply, so powerfully
that Malice was driven to her knees. Malice clutched at her head, thinking it
would explode from the building pressure. Gradually the pain eased away. But
you have pleased the Spider Queen this day, Malice Do'Urden, the yochlol
explained.. And it is agreed that your plans for your sacrilegious son are
appropriate. Zin-carla is granted, but know it as your final chance, Matron Malice
Do'Urden! Your greatest fears cannot begin to approach the truth of the
consequences of failure!
The yochlol disappeared in an explosive fireball that rocked the chapel of House
Do'Urden. Those gathered only rose to a higher frenzy at the bared power of the
evil deity, and Dinin led them again in a song of praise to Lloth.
"Ten weeks!" came the final cry of the handmaiden, a voice so mighty that the
lesser drow covered their ears and cowered on the floor.
And so for ten weeks, for seventy cycles of Narbondel, the daily time clock of
Menzoberranzan, all of House Do'Urden gathered in the great chapel, Dinin and
Rizzen leading the commoners in songs to the Spider Queen, while Malice and
her daughters worked over Zaknafein's corpse with magical salves and
combinations of powerful spells.
The animation of a corpse was a simple spell for a priestess, but Zin-carla went
far beyond that feat. Spirit-wraith, the undead result would be called, a zombie
imbued with the skills of its former life and controlled by the matron mother
appointed by Lloth. It was the most precious of Lloth's gifts, rarely asked for and
even more rarely granted, for Zin-carla-returning the spirit to the body-was a risky
practice indeed. Only through the sheer willpower of the enchanting priestess
were the undead being's desired skills kept separate from the unwanted
memories and emotions. The edge of consciousness and control was a fine line
to walk, even considering the mental discipline required of a high priestess.
Furthermore, Lloth only granted Zin-carla for the completion of specific tasks, and
stumbling from that fine line of discipline inevitably would result in failure.
Lloth was not merciful in the face of failure.
CHAPTER 6
BLINGDENSTONE
Blingdenstone was different from anything that Drizzt had ever seen. When the
svirfneblin guards ushered him in through the immense stone and iron doors, he
had expected a sight not unlike Menzoberranzan, though on a lesser scale. His
expectations could not have been further from the truth.
While Menzoberranzan sprawled in a single huge cavern, Blingdenstone was
composed of a series of chambers interconnected by low tunnels. The largest
cavern of the complex, just beyond the iron doors, was the first section Drizzt
entered. The city guard was housed there, and the chamber had been shaped
and designed solely for defense. Dozens of tiers and twice that number of
smooth stairways rose and fell, so that while an attacker might be only ten feet
from a defender, he would possibly have to climb down several levels and up
several others to get close enough to strike. Low walls of perfectly fitted piled
stone defined the walk-ways and weaved around higher, thicker walls that could
keep an invading army bottled up for a painfully long time in the chamber's
exposed sections.
Scores of svirfnebli rushed about their posts to confirm the whispers that a drow
elf had been brought in through the doors. They leered down at Drizzt from every
perch, and he couldn't be certain if their expressions signified curiosity or
outrage. In either case, the deep gnomes were certainly prepared against
anything he might attempt, every one of them clutched darts or heavy crossbows,
cocked and ready.
The svirfnebli led Drizzt through the chamber, up as many stairs as they went
down, always within the defined walkways and always with several other deep
gnome guards nearby. The path turned and dropped, rose up quickly, and cut
back on itself many times, and the only way that Drizzt could keep his bearing
was by watching the ceiling, which was visible even from the lowest levels of the
chamber. The drow smirked inwardly but dared not show a smile at the thought
that even if no deep gnome soldiers were present, an invading army would likely
spend hours trying to find its way through this single chamber.
Down at the end of a low and narrow corridor, where the deep gnomes had to
travel single file and Drizzt had to crouch with every step, the troupe entered the
city proper.
Wider but not nearly as long as the first room, this chamber, too, was tiered,
though with far fewer levels. Dozens of cave entrances lined the walls to all sides
and fires burned in several areas, a rare sight in the Underdark, for fuel was not
easily found. Blingdenstone was bright and warm by Underdark standards but
not uncomfortable in either case.
Drizzt felt at ease, despite his obvious predicament, as he watched the svirfnebli
go about their daily routines all around him. Curious gazes fell on him but did not
linger, for the deep gnomes of Blingdenstone were an industrious lot with hardly
the time to stand idly and watch.
Again Drizzt was led down clearly defined roadways. These in the city proper
were not as twisting and difficult as the ones in the entrance cavern. Here the
roads rolled out smoothly and straight, and all apparently led to a large, central
stone building.
The leader of the group escorting Drizzt rushed ahead to speak with two pickwielding
guards at this central structure. One of the guards bolted inside, while
the other held the iron door open for the patrol and its prisoner. Moving with
urgency for the first time since they had entered the city, the svirfnebli rushed
Drizzt through a series of bending corridors ending in a circular chamber no more
than eight feet in diameter and with an uncomfortably low ceiling. The room was
empty except for a single stone chair. As soon as he was placed in this, Drizzt
understood its purpose. Iron shackles were built into the chair, and Drizzt was
belted down tightly at every joint. The svirfnebli were not overly gentle, but when
Drizzt flinched as the chain around his waist doubled up and pinched him, one of
the deep gnomes quickly released then reset it, firmly but smoothly.
They left Drizzt alone in the dark and empty room. The stone door closed with a
dull thud of finality, and Drizzt could hear not a sound from beyond.
The hours passed.
Drizzt flexed his muscles, seeking some give in the tight shackles. One hand
wiggled and pulled, and only the pain of the iron biting into his wrist alerted him to
his actions. He was reverting to the hunter again, acting to survive and desiring
only to escape.
"No!" Drizzt yelled. He tensed every muscle and forced them back under his
rational control. Had the hunter gained that much of a place? Drizzt had come
here willingly, and, thus far, the meeting had proceeded better than he had
expected. This was not the time for desperate action, but was the hunter strong
enough to overrule even Drizzt's rational decisions?
Drizzt didn't find the time to answer those questions, for a second later, the stone
door banged open and a group of seven elderly-judging from the extraordinary
number of wrinkles crossing their faces-svirfnebli entered and fanned out around
the stone chair. Drizzt recognized the apparent importance of this group, for
where the guards had worn leather jacks set with mithril rings, these deep
gnomes wore robes of fine material. They bustled about, inspecting Drizzt closely
and chattering in their undecipherable tongue.
One svirfneblin held up Drizzt's house emblem, which had been taken from his
neck purse, and uttered, "Menzoberranzan?"
Drizzt nodded as much as his iron collar would allow, eager to strike up some
kind of communication with his captors. The deep gnomes had other intentions,
however. They went back to their private-and now even more excitedconversation.
It went on for many minutes, and Drizzt could tell by the inflections
of their voices that a couple of the svirfnebli were less than thrilled at having a
dark elf prisoner from the city of their closest and most-hated enemies. By the
angry tone of their arguing, Drizzt almost expected one of them to turn at any
moment and slice his throat.
It didn't happen like that, of course, deep gnomes were neither rash nor cruel
creatures. One of the group did turn from the others and walk over to face Drizzt
squarely. He asked, in halting but unmistakably drow language, "By the stones,
dark elf, why have you come?"
Drizzt did not know how to answer that simple question. How could he even
begin to explain his years of loneliness in the Underdark? Or the decision to
forsake his evil people and live in accordance with his principles?
"Friend,' he replied simply, and then he shifted uncomfortably, thinking his
response absurd and inadequate.
The svirfneblin, though, apparently thought otherwise. He scratched his hairless
chin and considered the answer deeply. "You . . . you came in to us from
Menzoberranzan?" he asked, his hawklike nose crinkling as he uttered each
word.
"I did,' Drizzt replied, gaining confidence.
The deep gnome tilted his head, waiting for Drizzt to extrapolate.
"I left Menzoberranzan many years ago,' Drizzt tried to explain. His eyes stared
away into the past as he remembered the life he had deserted. "It was never my
home:'
"Ah, but you lie, dark elf!" the svirfneblin shrieked, holding up the emblem of
House Do'Urden and missing the private connotations of Drizzt's words.
"I lived for many years in the city of the drow,' he replied quickly. "I am Drizzt
Do'Urden, once the secondboy of House Do'Urden:' He looked at the emblem the
svirfneblin held, stamped with the insignia of his family, and tried to explain.
"Daermon N'a'shezbaernon:'
The deep gnome turned to his comrades, who began talking all at once. One of
them nodded excitedly, apparently recognizing the drow house's ancient name,
which surprised Drizzt.
The deep gnome who had been questioning Drizzt tapped his fingers over his
wrinkled lips, making annoying little smacking sounds while he contemplating the
interrogation's direction. "By all of our information, House Do'Urden survives,' he
remarked casually, noting Drizzt's reactions. When Drizzt did not immediately
respond, the deep gnome snapped at him accusingly, "You are no rogue!"
How could the svirfnebli know that? Drizzt wondered. "I am a rogue by choice. . :'
he started to explain.
"Ah, dark elf,' the deep gnome replied, again calmly. "You are here by choice,
that much I can believe. But a rogue? By the stones, dark elf-" the deep gnome's
face contorted suddenly and fearfully-"you are a spy!" Then, suddenly, the deep
gnome once again calmed and relaxed into a comfortable posture.
Drizzt eyed him carefully. Was this svirfneblin adept at such abrupt attitude
changes, designed to keep a prisoner off guard? Or was such unpredictability the
norm for this race? Drizzt struggled with it for a moment, trying to remember his
one previous encounter with deep gnomes. But then his questioner reached into
an impossibly deep pocket in his thick robes and produced a familiar figurine.
"Tell me, now tell me true, dark elf, and spare yourself much torment. What is
this?" the deep gnome asked quietly.
Drizzt felt his muscles twitching again. The hunter wanted to call to Guenhwyvar,
to bring the panther in so that it could tear these wrinkled old svirfnebli apart. One
of them might hold the keys to Drizzt's chains-then he would be free. . .
Drizzt shook the thoughts from his head and drove the hunter out of his mind. He
knew the desperation of his situation and had known it from the moment he had
decided to come to Blingdenstone. If the svirfnebli truly believed him a spy, they
surely would execute him. Even if they were not certain of his intent, could they
dare to keep him alive?
"It was folly to come here:' Drizzt whispered under his breath, realizing the
dilemma he had placed upon himself and upon the deep gnomes. The hunter
tried to get back into his thoughts. A single word, and the panther would appear.
"No!" Drizzt cried for the second time that day, dismissing that darker side of
himself. The deep gnomes jumped back, fearing that the drow was casting a
spell. A dart nicked into Drizzt's chest, releasing a puff of gas on impact.
Drizzt swooned as the gas filled his nostrils. He heard the svirfnebli shuffling
about him, discussing his fate in their foreign tongue. He saw the form of one,
only a shadow, close in on him and grasp at his fingers, searching his hands for
possible magical components.
When Drizzt's thoughts and vision had at last cleared, all was as it had been. The
onyx figurine came up before his eyes. "What is this?" the same deep gnome
asked him again, this time a bit more insistently.
"A companion,' Drizzt whispered. "My only friend:' Drizzt thought hard about his
next actions for a long moment. He really couldn't blame the svirfnebli if they
killed him, and Guenhwyvar should be more than a statuette adorning some
unknowing deep gnome's mantle.
"Its name is Guenhwyvar,' Drizzt explained to the deep gnome. "Call to the
panther and it will come, an ally and friend. Keep it safe, for it is very precious
and very powerful:'
The svirfneblin looked to the figurine and then back to Drizzt, curiously and
cautiously. He handed the figurine to one of his companions and sent him out of
the room with it, not trusting the drow. If the drow had spoken truly, and the deep
gnome did not doubt that he had, Drizzt had just given away the secret to a very
valuable magical item. Even more startling, if Drizzt had spoken truly, he might
have relinquished his single chance of escape. This svirfneblin had lived for
nearly two centuries and was as knowledgeable in the ways of the dark elves as
any of his people. When a drow elf acted unpredictably, as this one surely had, it
troubled the svirfneblin deeply. Dark elves were cruel and evil by well-earned
reputation, and when an individual drow fit that usual pattern, he could be dealt
with efficiently and without remorse. But what might the deep gnomes do with a
drow who showed a measure of unexpected morals?
The svirfnebli went back to their private conversation, ignoring Drizzt altogether.
Then they left, with the exception of the one who could speak the dark elf tongue.
"What will you do?" Drizzt dared to ask.
"Judgment is reserved for the king alone:' the deep gnome replied soberly. "He
will rule on your fate in several days perhaps, based on the observations of his
advising council, the group you have met.' The deep gnome bowed low, then
looked Drizzt in the eye as he rose and said bluntly, "I suspect, dark elf, that you
will be executed.'
Drizzt nodded, resigned to the logic that would call for his death.
"But I believe you are different, dark elf:' the deep gnome went on. "I suspect, as
well, that I will recommend leniency, or at least mercy, in the execution.' With a
quick shrug of his heavyset shoulders, tae svirfneblin turned about and headed
for the door.
The tone of the deep gnome's words struck a familiar chord in Drizzt. Another
svirfneblin had spoken to Drizzt in a similar manner, with strikingly similar words,
many years before.
"Wait:' Drizzt called. The svirfneblin paused and turned, and Drizzt fumbled with
his thoughts, trying to remember the name of the deep gnome he had saved on
that past occasion.
"What is it?" the svirfneblin asked, growing impatient.
"A deep gnome:' Drizzt sputtered. "From your city, I believe. Yes, he had to be.'
"You know one of my people, dark elf.'" the svirfneblin prompted, stepping back
to the stone chair. "Name him?'
"I do not know:' Drizzt replied. "I was a member of a hunting party, years ago, a
decade perhaps. We battled a group of svirfnebli that had come into our region:'
He flinched at the deep gnome's frown but continued on, knowing that the single
svirfneblin survivor of that encounter might be his only hope. "Only one deep
gnome survived, I think, and returned to Blingdenstone:'
"What was this survivor's name?" the svirfneblin demanded angrily, his arms
crossed tightly over his chest and his heavy boot tapping on the stone floor.
"I do not remember,' Drizzt admitted.
"Why do you tell me this?" the svirfneblin growled. "I had thought you different
from-"
"He lost his hands in the battle,' Drizzt went on stubbornly. "Please, you must
know of him:'
"Belwar?" the svirfneblin replied immediately. The name rekindled even more
memories in Drizzt.
"Belwar Dissengulp,' Drizzt spouted. "Then he is alive! He might remember-"
"He will never forget that evil day, dark elf!" the svirfneblin declared through
clenched teeth, an angry edge evident in his voice. "None in Blingdenstone will
ever forget that evil day!"
"Get him. Get Belwar Dissengulp,' Drizzt pleaded.
The deep gnome backed out of the room, shaking his head at the dark elf's
continued surprises.
The stone door slammed shut, leaving Drizzt alone to contemplate his mortality
and to push aside hopes he dared not hope.
"Did you think that I would let you go away from me?" Malice was saying to
Rizzen when Dinin entered the chapel's anteroom. "It was but a ploy to keep
SiNafay Hun'ell's suspicions at ease:'
"Thank you, Matron Mother,' Rizzen replied in honest relief. Bowing with every
step, he backed away from Malice's throne. Malice looked around at her
gathered family. "Our weeks of toil are ended,' she proclaimed. "Zin-carla is
complete!"
Dinin wrung his hands in anticipation. Only the females of the family had seen
the product of their work. On cue from Malice, Vierna moved to a curtain on the
side of the room and pulled it away. There stood Zaknafein, the weapon master,
no longer a rotting corpse, but showing the vitality he had possessed in life.
Dinin rocked back on his heels as the weapon master came forward to stand
before Matron Malice.
"As handsome as you always were, my dear Zaknafein,' Malice purred to the
spirit-wraith. The undead thing made no response.
"And more obedient,' Briza added, drawing chuckles from all the females.
"This. . . he . . . will go after Drizzt?" Dinin dared to ask, though he fully
understood that it was not his place to speak. Malice and the others were too
absorbed by the spectacle of Zaknafein to punish the elderboy's oversight.
"Zaknafein will exact the punishment that your brother so deeply deserves,'
Malice promised, her eyes sparkling at the notion.
"But wait,' Malice said coyly, looking from the spirit-wraith to Rizzen. "He is too
pretty to inspire fear in my impudent son:' The others exchanged confused
glances, wondering if Malice was further trying to placate Rizzen for the ordeal
she had put him through.
"Come, my husband,' Malice said to Bizzen. "Take your blade and mark your
dead rival's face. It will feel good to you, and it will inspire terror in Drizzt when he
looks upon his old mentor!"
Rizzen moved tentatively at first, then gained confidence as he closed on the
spirit-wraith. Zaknafein stood perfectly still, not breathing or blinking, seemingly
oblivious to the events around him. Bizzen put a hand to his sword, looking back
to Malice one final time for confirmation.
Malice nodded. With a snarl, Bizzen brought his sword out of its sheath and
thrust it at Zaknafein's face. But it never got close.
Quicker than the others could follow, the spirit-wraith exploded into motion. Two
swords came out and cut away, diving and crossing with perfect precision. The
sword went flying from Rizzen's hand and, before the doomed patron of House
Do'Urden could even speak a word of protest, one of Zaknafein's swords crossed
over his throat and the other plunged deep into his heart.
Rizzen was dead before he hit the floor, but the spirit-wraith was not so quickly
and cleanly finished with him. Zaknafein's weapons continued their assault,
hacking and slicing into Rizzen a dozen times until Malice, satisfied with the
display, called him off.
"That one bores me,' Malice explained to the disbelieving stares of her children.
"I have another patron already selected from among the commoners:'
It was not, however, Rizzen's death that inspired the awestruck expressions of
Malice's children, they cared nothing for any of the mates that their mother chose
as patron of the house, always a temporary position. It was the speed and skill of
the spirit-wraith that had stolen their breath.
"As good as in life,' Dinin remarked.
"Better!" Malice replied. "Zaknafein is all that he was as a warrior, and now that
fighting skill holds his every thought. He will view no distractions from his chosen
course. Look upon him, my children. Zin-carla, the gift of Lloth:' She turned to
Dinin and smiled wickedly.
"I'll not approach the thing,' Dinin gasped, thinking his macabre mother might
desire a second display.
Malice laughed at him. "Fear not, Elderboy. I have no cause to harm you:'
Dinin hardly relaxed at her words. Malice needed no cause, the hacked body of
Rizzen showed that fact all too clearly.
"You will lead the spirit-wraith out,' Malice said.
"Out?" Dinin replied tentatively.
"Into the region where you encountered your brother,' Malice explained.
"I am to stay beside the thing?" Dinin gasped.
"Lead him out and leave him,' Malice replied. "Zaknafein knows his prey. He has
been imbued with spells to aid him in his hunt:' Off to the side, Briza seemed
concerned.
"What is it?" Malice demanded of her, seeing her frown.
"I do not question the spirit-wraith's power, or the magic that you have placed
upon it,' Briza began tentatively, knowing that Malice would accept no discord
regarding this all-important matter.
"You still fear your youngest brother?" Malice asked her. Briza didn't know how to
answer.
"Allay your fears, as valid as you may think them,' Malice said calmly. "All of you.
Zaknafein is the gift of our queen. Nothing in all the Underdark will stop him!" She
looked at the undead monster. "You will not fail me, will you my weapon master?"
Zaknafein stood impassive, bloodied swords back in their scabbards, hands at
his sides, and eyes unblinking. A statue, he seemed, not breathing. Unalive.
But any who thought Zaknafein inanimate needed only to look at the spiritwraith's
feet, to the mutilated lump of gore that had been the patron of House
Do'Urden.
PART 2
BELWAR
Friendship: The word has come to mean many different things among the
various races and cultures of both the Underdark and the surface of the Realms.
In Menzoberranzan, friendship is generally born out of mutual profit. While both
parties are better off for the union, it remains secure. But loyalty is not a tenet of
drow life, and as soon as a friend believes that he will gain more without the
other, the union-and likely the other's life-will come to a swift end.
I have had few friends in my life, and if I live a thousand years, I suspect that this
will remain true. There is little to lament in this fact, though, for those who have
called me friend have been persons of great character and have enriched my
existence, given it worth. First there was Zaknafein, my father and mentor who
showed me that I was not alone and that I was not incorrect in holding to my
beliefs. Zaknafein saved me, from both the blade and the chaotic, evil, fanatic
religion that damns my people.
Yet I was no less lost when a handless deep gnome came into my life, a
svirfneblin that I had rescued from certain death, many years before, at my
brother Dinin's merciless blade. My deed was repaid in full, for when the
svirfneblin and I again met, this time in the clutches of his people, I would have
been killed-truly would have preferred death-were it not for Belwar Dissengulp.
My time in Blingdenstone, the city of the deep gnomes, was such a short span in
the measure of my years. I remember well Belwar's city and his people, and I
always shall.
Theirs was the first society I came to know that was based on the strengths of
community, not the paranoia of selfish individualism. Together the deep gnomes
survive against the perils of the hostile Underdark, labor in their endless toils of
mining the stone, and play games that are hardly distinguishable from every
other aspect of their rich lives.
Greater indeed are pleasures that are shared.
-Drizzt Do'Urden
CHAPTER 7
MOST HONORED BURROW-WARDEN
"Our thanks for your coming, Most Honored Burrow- Warden,' said one of the
deep gnomes gathered outside the small room holding the drow prisoner. The
entire group of svirfneblin elders bowed low at the burrow-warden's approach.
Belwar Dissengulp flinched at the gracious greeting. He had never come to terms
with the many laurels his people had mantled upon him since that disastrous day
more than a decade before, when the drow elves had discovered his mining
troupe in the corridors east of Blingdenstone, near Menzoberranzan. Horribly
maimed and nearly dead from loss of blood, Belwar had returned back to
Blingdenstone as the only survivor of the expedition.
The gathered svirfnebli parted for Belwar, giving him a clear view of the room and
the drow. For prisoners strapped in the chair, the circular chamber seemed solid,
unremarkable stone with no opening other than the heavy iron-bound door.
There was, however, a single window in the chamber, covered by illusions of
both sight and sound, that allowed the svirfneblin captors to view the prisoner at
all times.
Belwar studied Drizzt for several moments. "He is a drow,' the burrow-warden
huffed in his resonant voice, sounding a bit perturbed. Belwar still could not
understand why he had been summoned. "Appearing as any other drow:'
"The prisoner claims he met you out in the Underdark,' an ancient svirfneblin said
to Belwar. His voice was barely a whisper, and he dropped his gaze to the floor
as he completed the thought. "On that day of great loss:'
Belwar flinched again at the mention of that day. How many times must he relive
it?
"He may have,' Belwar said with a noncommittal shrug. "Not much can I
distinguish between the appearances of drow elves, and not much do I wish to
try."
"Agreed,' said the other. "They all look alike:'
As the deep gnome spoke, Drizzt turned his face to the side and faced them
directly, though he could not see or hear anything beyond the illusion of stone.
"Perhaps you may remember his name, Burrow-Warden,' another svirfneblin
offered. The speaker paused, seeing Belwar's sudden interest in the drow.
The circular chamber was lightless, and under such conditions, the eyes of a
creature seeing in the infrared spectrum shone clearly. Normally, these eyes
appeared as dots of red light, but that was not the case with Drizzt Do'Urden.
Even in the infrared spectrum, this drow's eyes showed clearly as lavender.
Belwar remembered those eyes. "Magga cammara,' Belwar breathed. "Drizzt,' he
mumbled in reply to the other deep gnome.
"You do know him!" several of the svirfnebli cried together.
Belwar held up the handless stumps of his arms, one capped with the mithril
head of a pickaxe, the other with the head of a hammer. "This drow, this Drizzt,'
he stammered, trying to explain. "Responsible for my condition, he was!"
Some of the others murmured prayers for the doomed drow, thinking the burrowwarden
was angered by the memory. "Then King Schnicktick's decision stands,'
one of them said. "The drow is to be executed immediately:'
"But he, this Drizzt, he saved my life,' Belwar interjected loudly. The others,
incredulous, turned on him.
"Never was it Drizzt's decision that my hands be severed,' the burrow-warden
went on. "It was his offering that I be allowed to return to Blingdenstone. 'As an
example, this
Drizzt said, but I understood even then that the words were uttered only to
placate his cruel kin. The truth behind those words, I know, and that truth was
mercy!"
An hour later, a single svirfneblin councilor, the one who had spoken to Drizzt
earlier, came to the prisoner. "It was the decision of the king that you be
executed,' the deep gnome said bluntly as he approached the stone chair.
"I understand,' Drizzt replied as calmly as he could. "I will offer no resistance to
your verdict:' Drizzt considered his shackles for a moment. "Not that I could:'
The svirfneblin stopped and considered the unpredictable prisoner, fully believing
in Drizzt's sincerity. Before he continued, meaning to expand on the events of the
day, Drizzt completed his thought.
"I ask only one favor,' Drizzt said. The svirfneblin let him finish, curious of the
unusual drow's reasoning.
"The panther,' Drizzt went on. "You will find Guenhwyvar to be a valued
companion and a dear friend indeed. When I am no more, you must see to it that
the panther is given to a deserving master-Belwar Dissengulp perhaps. Promise
me this, good gnome, I beg:'
The svirfneblin shook his hairless head, not to deny Drizzt's plea, but in simple
disbelief. "The king, with much remorse, simply could not allow the risks of
keeping you alive,' he said somberly. The deep gnome's wide mouth turned up in
a smile as he quickly added, "But the situation has changed!"
Drizzt cocked his head, hardly daring to hope.
"The burrow-warden remembers you, dark elf,' the svirfneblin proclaimed. "Most
Honored Burrow-Warden Belwar Dissengulp has spoken for you and will accept
the responsibility of keeping you!"
"Then. . . I am not to die?"
"Not unless you bring death upon yourself:'
Drizzt could barely utter the words. "And I am to be allowed to live among your
people? In Blingdenstone?"
"That is yet to be determined,' replied the svirfneblin. "Belwar Dissengulp has
spoken for you, and that is a very great thing. You will go to live with him.
Whether the situation will be continued or expanded. . :' He let it hang at that,
giving an unanswering shrug.
Following his release, the walk through the caverns of Blingdenstone was truly an
exercise in hope for the beleaguered drow. Drizzt saw every sight in the deep
gnome city as a contrast to Menzoberranzan. The dark elves had worked the
great cavern of their city into shaped artwork, undeniably beautiful. The deep
gnome city, too, was beautiful, but its features remained the natural traits of the
stone. Where the drow had taken their cavern as their own, cutting it to their
designs and tastes, the svirfnebli had fitted themselves into the native designs of
their complex.
Menzoberranzan held a vastness, with a ceiling up beyond sight, that
Blingdenstone could not approach. The drow city was a series of individual family
castles, each a closed fortress and a house unto itself. In the deep gnome city
was a general sense of home, as if the entire complex within the mammoth
stone-and-metal doors was a singular structure, a community shelter from the
ever-present dangers of the Underdark.
The angles of the svirfneblin city, too, were different. Like the features of the
diminutive race, Blingdenstone's buttresses and tiers were rounded, smooth, and
gracefully curving. Conversely, Menzoberranzan was an angular place, as sharp
as the point of a stalactite, a place of alleyways and leering terraces. Drizzt
considered the two cities distinctive of the races they housed, sharp and soft like
the features-and the hearts, Drizzt dared to imagine-of their respective
inhabitants.
Tucked away in a remote corner of one of the outer chambers sat Belwar's
dwelling, a tiny structure of stone built around the opening of an even smaller
cave. Unlike most of the open-faced svirfneblin dwellings, Belwar's house had a
front door. One of the five guards escorting Drizzt tapped on the door with the
butt of his mace. "Greetings, Most Honored Burrow-Warden!" he called. "By
orders of King Schnicktick, we have delivered the drow:'
Drizzt took note of the respectful tone of the guard's voice. He had feared for
Belwar on that day a decade and more ago, and had wondered if Dinin's cutting
off the deep gnome's hands wasn't more cruel than simply killing the unfortunate
creature. Cripples did not fare well in the savage Underdark.
The stone door swung open and Belwar greeted his guests. Immediately his
gaze locked with Drizzt's in a look they had shared ten years before, when they
had last parted.
Drizzt saw a somberness in the burrow-warden's eyes, but the stout pride
remained, if a bit diminished. Drizzt did not want to look upon the svirfneblin's
disfigurement, too many unpleasant memories were tied up in that long-ago
deed. But, inevitably, the drow's gaze dropped, down Belwar's barrel-like torso to
the ends of his arms, which hung by his side.
Far from his fears, Drizzt's eyes widened in wonderment when he looked upon
Belwar's "hands:' On the right side, wondrously fitted to cap the stub of his arm,
was the blocked head of a hammer crafted of mithril and etched with intricate,
fabulous runes and carvings of an earth elemental and some other creatures that
Drizzt did not know.
Belwar's left appendage was no less spectacular. There the deep gnome wielded
a two-headed pickaxe, also of mithril and equally crafted in runes and carvings,
most notably a dragon taking flight across the flat surface of the instrument's
wider end. Drizzt could sense the magic in Belwar's hands, and he realized that
many other svirfnebli, both artisans and magic-users, had played a part in
perfecting the items.
"Useful,' Belwar remarked after allowing Drizzt to study his mithril hands for a few
moments.
"Beautiful,' Drizzt whispered in reply, and he was thinking of more than the
hammer and pick. The hands themselves were indeed marvelous, but the
implications of their crafting seemed even more so to Drizzt. If a dark elf,
particularly a drow male, had crawled back into Menzoberranzan in such a
disfigured state, he would have been rejected and put out by his family to wander
about as a helpless rogue until some slave or other drow finally put an end to his
misery. There was no room for apparent weakness in the drow culture. Here,
obviously, the svirfnebli had accepted Belwar and had cared for him in the best
way they knew how.
Drizzt politely returned his stare to the burrow-warden's eyes. "You remembered
me:' he said. "I had feared-"
"Later we shall talk, Drizzt Do'Urden:' Belwar interrupted. Using the svirfneblin
tongue, which Drizzt did not know, the burrow-warden said to the guards, "If your
business is completed, then take your leave,'
"We are at your command, Most Honored Burrow-Warden:' one of the guards
replied. Drizzt noticed Belwar's slight shudder at the mention of the title. "The
king has sent us as escorts and guards, to remain by your side until the truth of
this drow is revealed,'
"Be gone, then:' Belwar replied, his booming voice rising in obvious ire. He
looked directly at Drizzt as he finished. "I know the truth of this one already. I am
in no danger,'
"Your pardon, Most Honor-"
"You are excused:' Belwar said abruptly, seeing that the guard meant to argue.
"Be gone. I have spoken for this one. He is in my care, and I fear him not at all,'
The svirfneblin guards bowed low and slowly moved away. Belwar took Drizzt
inside the door, then turned him back to slyly point out that two of the guards had
taken up cautious positions beside nearby structures. "Too much do they worry
for my health:' he remarked dryly in the drow tongue.
"You should be grateful for such care,' Drizzt replied.
"I am not ungrateful!" Belwar shot back, an angry flush coming to his face.
Drizzt read the truth behind those words. Belwar was not ungrateful, that much
was correct, but the burrow-warden did not believe that he deserved such
attention. Drizzt kept his suspicions private, not wanting to further embarrass the
proud svirfneblin.
The inside of Belwar's house was sparsely furnished with a stone table and
single stool, several shelves of pots and jugs, and a fire pit with an iron cooking
grate. Beyond the rough-hewn entrance to the back room, the room within the
small cave, was the deep gnome's sleeping quarters, empty except for a
hammock strung from wall to wall. Another hammock, newly acquired for Drizzt,
lay in a heap on the floor, and a leather, mithril-ringed jack hung on the back wall,
with a pile of sacks and pouches underneath it.
"In the entry room we shall string it,' Belwar said, pointing with his hammer-hand
to the second hammock. Drizzt moved to get the item, but Belwar caught him
with his pick-hand and spun him about.
"Later,' the svirfneblin explained. "First you must tell me why you have come:' He
studied Drizzt's battered clothing and scuffed and dirty face. It was obvious that
the drow had been out in the wilds for some time. "And tell me, too, you must,
where you have come from:'
Drizzt flopped down on the stone floor and put his back against the wall. "I came
because I had nowhere else to go,' he answered honestly.
"How long have you been out of your city, Drizzt Do'Urden?" Belwar asked him
softly. Even in quieter tones, the solid deep gnome's voice rang out with the
clarity of a finely tuned bell. Drizzt marveled at its emotive range and how it could
convey sincere compassion or inspire fear with subtle changes of volume.
Drizzt shrugged and let his head roll back so that his gaze was raised to the
ceiling. His mind already looked down a road to his past. "Years-I have lost count
of the time:' He looked back to the svirfneblin. "Time has little meaning in the
open passages of the Underdark:'
From Drizzt's ragged appearance, Belwar could not doubt the truth of his words,
but the deep gnome was surprised nonetheless. He moved over to the table in
the center of the room and took a seat on a stool. Belwar had witnessed Drizzt in
battle, had once seen the drow defeat an earth elemental-no easy feat! But if
Drizzt was indeed speaking the truth, if he had survived alone out in the wilds of
the Underdark for years, then the burrow-warden's respect for him would be even
more considerable.
"Of your adventures, you must tell me, Drizzt Do'Urden,' Belwar prompted. "I
wish to know everything about you, so that I may better understand your purpose
in coming to a city of your racial enemies:'
Drizzt paused for a long time, wondering where and how to begin. He trusted
Belwar-what other choice did he have?-but he wasn't sure if the svirfneblin could
begin to understand the dilemma that had forced him out of the security of
Menzoberranzan. Could Belwar, living in a community of such obvious friendship
and cooperation, understand the tragedy that was Menzoberranzan? Drizzt
doubted it, but again, what choice did he have?
Drizzt quietly recounted to Belwar the story of the last decade of his life, of the
impending war between House Do'Urden and House Hun'ett, of his meeting with
Masoj and
Alton, when he acquired Guenhwyvar, of the sacrifice of Zaknafein, Drizzt's
mentor, father, and friend, and of his subsequent decision to forsake his kin and
their evil deity, Lloth. Belwar realized that Drizzt was talking about the dark
goddess the deep gnomes called Lolth, but he calmly let the regionalism pass. If
Belwar had any suspicions at all, not really knowing Drizzt's true intent on that
day when they had met many years before, the burrow-warden soon came to
believe that his guesses about this drow had been accurate. Belwar found
himself shuddering and trembling as Drizzt told of life in the Underdark, of his
encounter with the basilisk, and the battle with his brother and sister.
Before Drizzt even mentioned his reason for seeking the svirfnebli-the agony of
his loneliness and the fear that he was losing his very identity in the savagery
necessary to survive in the wilds-Belwar had guessed it all. When Drizzt came to
the final days of his life outside of Blingdenstone, he picked his words carefully.
Drizzt had not yet come to terms with his feelings and fears of who he truly was,
and he was not yet ready to divulge his thoughts, however much he trusted his
new companion.
The burrow-warden sat silently, just looking at Drizzt when the drow had finished
his tale. Belwar understood the pain of the recounting. He did not prod for more
information or ask for details of personal anguish that Drizzt had not openly
shared.
"Magga cammara,' the deep gnome whispered soberly.
Drizzt cocked his head.
"By the stones,' Belwar explained. "Magga cammara?'
"By the stones indeed,' Drizzt agreed. A long and uncomfortable silence ensued.
"A fine tale, it is,' Belwar said quietly. He patted Drizzt once on the shoulder, then
walked into the cave-room to retrieve the spare hammock. Before Drizzt even
rose to assist, Belwar had set the hammock in place between hooks on the walls.
"Sleep in peace, Drizzt Do'Urden,' Belwar said, as he turned to retire. "No
enemies have you here. No monsters lurk beyond the stone of my door.'
Then Belwar was gone into the other room and Drizzt was left alone in the
undecipherable swirl of his thoughts and emotions. He remained uncomfortable,
but, surely, his was hope renewed.
CHAPTER 8
STRANGERS
Drizzt looked out Belwar's open door at the daily routines of the svirfneblin city,
as he had every day for the last few weeks. Drizzt felt as though his life was in a
state of limbo, as though everything had been put into stasis. He had not seen or
heard of Guenhwyvar since he had come to Belwar's house, nor had he any
expectations of getting his piwafwi or his weapons and armor back anytime soon.
Drizzt accepted it all stoically, figuring that he, and Guenhwyvar, were better off
now than they had been in many years and confident that the svirfnebli would not
harm the statuette or any of his other possessions. The drow sat and watched,
letting events take their due course.
Belwar had gone out this day, one of the rare occasions that the reclusive
burrow-warden left his house. Despite the fact that the deep gnome and Drizzt
rarely conversed-
Belwar was not the type who spoke simply for the sake of hearing his own voice-
Drizzt found that he missed the burrow-warden. Their friendship had grown, even
if the substance of their conversations had not.
A group of young svirfnebli walked past and shouted a few quick words at the
drow within. This had happened many times before, particularly in the first days
after Drizzt had entered the city. On those previous occasions, Drizzt had been
left wondering if he had been greeted or insulted. This time, though, Drizzt
understood the basic friendly meaning of the words, for Belwar had taken the
time to instruct him in the basics of the svirfneblin tongue.
The burrow-warden returned hours later to find Drizzt sitting on the stone stool,
watching the world slip past.
"Tell me, dark elf:' the deep gnome asked in his hearty, melodic voice, "what do
you see when you look upon us? Are we so foreign to your ways?"
"I see hope:' Drizzt replied. " And I see despair:' Belwar understood. He knew
that the svirfneblin society was better suited to the drow's principles, but watching
the bustle of Blingdenstone from afar could only evoke painful memories in his
new friend.
"King Schnicktick and I met this day:' the burrow-warden said. "I tell you in truth
that he is very interested in you:'
"Curious would seem a better word:' Drizzt replied, but he smiled as he did so,
and Belwar wondered how much pain was hidden behind the grin.
The burrow-warden dipped into a short, apologetic bow, surrendering to Drizzt's
blunt honesty. "Curious, then, as you wish. You must know that you are not as
we have come to regard drow elves. I beg that you take no offense:'
"None:' Drizzt answered honestly. "You and your people have given me more
than I dared hope. If I had been killed that first day in the city, I would have
accepted the fate without placing blame on the svirfnebli:'
Belwar followed Drizzt's gaze out across the cavern, to the group of gathered
youngsters. "You should go among them:' Belwar offered.
Drizzt looked at him, surprised. In all the time he had spent in Belwar's house,
the svirfneblin had never suggested such a thing. Drizzt had assumed that he
was to remain the burrow-warden's guest, and that Belwar had been made
personally responsible for curtailing his movements.
Belwar nodded toward the door, silently reiterating his suggestion. Drizzt looked
out again. Across the cavern, the group of young svirfnebli, a dozen or so, had
begun a contest of heaving rather large stones at an effigy of a basilisk, a lifesized
likeness built of stones and old suits of armor. Svirfnebli were highly skilled
in the magical crafts of illusion, and one such illusionist had placed minor
enchantments upon the likeness to smooth out the rough spots and make the
effigy appear even more lifelike.
"Dark elf, you must go out sometime,' Belwar reasoned. "How long will you find
my home's blank walls fulfilling?"
"They suit you,' Drizzt retorted, a bit more sharply than he had intended.
Belwar nodded and slowly turned about to survey the room. "So they do,' he said
quietly, and Drizzt could clearly see his great pain. When Belwar turned back to
the drow, his round-featured face held an unmistakably resigned expression.
"Magga cammara, dark elf. Let that be your lesson:'
"Why?" Drizzt asked him. "Why does Belwar Dissengulp, the Most Honored
Burrow-Warden-" Belwar flinched again at the title-"remain within the shadows of
his own door?"
Belwar's jaw firmed up and his dark eyes narrowed. "Go out,' he said in a
resonating growl. "Young you are, dark elf, and all the world is before you. Old I
am. My day is long past:'
"Not so old,' Drizzt started to argue, determined this time to press the burrowwarden
into revealing what it was that troubled him so. But Belwar simply turned
and walked silently into his cave-room, pulling closed behind him the blanket he
had strung up as a door.
Drizzt shook his head and banged his fist into his palm in frustration. Belwar had
done so much for him, first by saving him from the svirfneblin king's judgment,
then by befriending him over the last few weeks and teaching him the svirfneblin
tongue and the deep gnomes' ways. Drizzt had been unable to return the favor,
though he clearly saw that
Belwar carried some great burden. Drizzt wanted to rush through the blanket
now, go to the burrow-warden, and make him speak his gloomy thoughts.
Drizzt would not yet be so bold with his new friend, however. He would find the
key to the burrow-warden's pain in time, he vowed, but right now he had his own
dilemma to overcome. Belwar had given him permission to go out into
Blingdenstone! Drizzt looked back to the group across the cavern. Three of them
stood perfectly still before the effigy, as if turned to stone. Curious, Drizzt moved
to the doorway, and then, before he realized what he was doing, he was outside
and approaching the young deep gnomes.
The game ended as the drow neared, the svirfnebli being more interested in
meeting the dark elf they had rumored about for so many weeks. They rushed
over to Drizzt and surrounded him, whispering curiously.
Drizzt felt his muscles tense involuntarily as the svirfnebli moved all about him.
The primal instincts of the hunter sensed a vulnerability that could not be
tolerated. Drizzt fought hard to sublimate his alter ego, silently but firmly
reminding himself that the svirfnebli were not his enemies. "Greetings, drow
friend of Belwar Dissengulp,' one of the youngsters offered. "I am Seldig,
fledgling and pledgling, and to be an expedition miner in but three years hence:'
It took Drizzt a long moment to sort out the deep gnome's rapid speech patterns.
He did understand the significance of Seldig's future occupation, though, for
Belwar had told him that expedition miners, those svirfnebli who went out into the
Underdark in search of precious minerals and gems, were among the highest
ranking deep gnomes in all the city.
"Greetings, Seldig,' Drizzt answered at length. "I am Drizzt Do'Urden:' Not really
knowing what he should do next, Drizzt crossed his arms over his chest. For the
dark elves, this was a gesture of peace, though Drizzt was not certain if the
motion was universally accepted throughout the Underdark.
The svirfnebli looked around at each other, returned the gesture, then smiled in
unison at the sound of Drizzt's relieved sigh.
"You have been in the Underdark, so it is said,' Seldig went on, motioning for
Drizzt to follow him back to the area of their game.
"For many years,' Drizzt replied, falling into step beside the young svirfneblin.
The hunting ego within the drow grew ill at ease at the following deep gnomes'
proximity, but
Drizzt was in full control of his reflexive paranoia. When the group reached the
fabricated basilisk's side, Seldig sat on the stone and bid Drizzt to give them a
tale or two of his adventures.
Drizzt hesitated, doubting that his command of the svirfneblin tongue would be
sufficient for such a task, but Seldig and the others pressed him. At length, Drizzt
nodded and stood. He spent a moment in thought, trying to remember some tale
that might interest the youngsters. His gaze unconsciously roamed the cavern,
searching for some clue. It fell upon, and locked upon, the illusion-heightened
basilisk effigy.
"Basilisk,' Seldig explained.
"I know,' Drizzt replied. "I have met such a creature:' He turned casually back to
the group and was startled by its appearance. Seldig and every one of his
companions had rocked forward, their mouths hanging open in a mixture of
expressed intrigue, terror, and delight.
"Dark elf! You have seen a basilisk?" one of them asked incredulously. "A real,
living basilisk?"
Drizzt smiled as he came to decipher their amazement. The svirfnebli, unlike the
dark elves, sheltered the younger members of their community. Though these
deep gnomes were probably as old as Drizzt, they had rarely, if ever, been out of
Blingdenstone. By their age, drow elves would have spent years patrolling the
corridors beyond Menzoberranzan. Drizzt's recognition of the basilisk would not
have been so unbelievable to the deep gnomes then, though the formidable
monsters were rare even in the Underdark.
"You said that basilisks were not real!" one of the svirfnebli shouted to another,
and he pushed him hard on the shoulder.
"Never I did!" the other protested, returning the shove.
"My uncle saw one once,' offered another.
"Scrapings in the stone was all your uncle saw!" Seldig laughed. "They were the
tracks of a basilisk, by his own proclamation:' Drizzt's smile widened. Basilisks
were magical creatures, more common on other planes of existence. While drow,
particularly the high priestesses, often opened gates to other planes, such
monsters obviously were beyond the norm of svirfneblin life. Few were the deep
gnomes who had ever looked upon a basilisk. Drizzt chuckled aloud. Fewer still,
no doubt, were the deep gnomes who ever returned to tell that they had seen
one!
"If your uncle followed the trail and found the monster, Seldig continued, "he
would sit to this day as a pile of stone in a passageway! I say to you now that
rocks do not tell such tales!"
The berated deep gnome looked around for some rebuttal. "Drizzt Do'Urden has
seen one!" he protested. "He is not so much a pile of stone!" All eyes turned back
to Drizzt.
"Have you really seen one, dark elf?" Seldig asked. "Answer only in truth, I beg:'
"One,' Drizzt replied.
"And you escaped from it before it could return the gaze?" Seldig asked, a
question he and the other svirfnebli considered rhetorical.
"Escaped?" Drizzt echoed the gnomish word, unsure of its meaning.
"Escape. . . err. . . run away,' Seldig explained. He looked to one of the other
svirfnebli, who promptly feigned a look of sheer horror, then stumbled and
scrambled frantically a few steps away. The other deep gnomes applauded the
performance, and Drizzt joined in their laughter.
"You ran from the basilisk before it could return your gaze,' Seldig reasoned.
Drizzt shrugged, a bit embarrassed, and Seldig guessed that he was withholding
something.
"You did not run away?"
"I could not. . . escape,' Drizzt explained. "The basilisk had invaded my home and
had killed many of my rothe. Homes,' he paused, searching for the correct
svirfneblin word. "Sanctuaries,' he explained at length, " are not commonplace in
the wilds of the Underdark. Once found and secured, they must be defended at
all costs:'
"You fought it?" came an anonymous cry from the rear of the svirfneblin group.
"With stones from afar?" asked Seldig. "That is the accepted method:'
Drizzt looked over at the pile of boulders the deep gnomes had been hurling at
the effigy, then considered his own slender frame. "My arms could not even lift
such stones:' He laughed.
"Then how?" asked Seldig. "You must tell us:'
Drizzt now had his story. He paused for a few moments, collecting his thoughts.
He realized that his limited skills with his new language would not allow him to
weave much of an intricate tale, so he decided to illustrate his words. He found
two poles that the svirfnebli had been carrying, explained them as scimitars, then
examined the effigy's construction to ensure that it would hold his weight.
The young deep gnomes huddled around anxiously as Drizzt set up the situation,
detailing his darkness spell- actually placing one just beyond the basilisk's headand
the positioning of Guenhwyvar, his feline companion. The svirfnebli sat on
their hands and leaned forward, gasping at every word. The effigy seemed to
come alive in their minds, a lumbering monster, with Drizzt, this stranger to their
world, lurking in the shadows behind it.
The drama played out and the time came for Drizzt to enact his movements in
the battle. He heard the svirfnebli gasp in unison as he sprang lightly onto the
basilisk's back, carefully picking his steps up toward the thing's head. Drizzt
became caught up in their excitement, and this only heightened his memories.
It all became so real.
The deep gnomes moved in close, anticipating a dazzling display of
swordsmanship from this remarkable drow who had come to them from the wilds
of the Underdark. Then something terrible happened.
One moment he was Drizzt the showman, entertaining his new friends with a tale
of courage and weaponry. The next moment, as the drow lifted one of his pole
props to strike at the phony monster, he was Drizzt no longer. The hunter stood
atop the basilisk, just as he had that day back in the tunnels outside the mossfilled
cave.
Poles jabbed at the monster's eyes, poles slammed viciously into the stone head.
The svirfnebli backed away, some in fear, others in simple caution. The hunter
pounded away, and the stone chipped and cracked. The slab that served as the
creature's head broke away and fell, the dark elf tumbling behind. The hunter
went down in a precise roll, came back to his feet, and charged right back in,
slamming away furiously with his poles. The wooden weapons snapped apart
and Drizzt's hands bled, but he-the hunter-would not yield.
Strong deep gnome hands grabbed the drow by the arms, trying to calm him.
The hunter spun on his newest adversaries. They were stronger than he, and two
held him tightly, but a few deft twists had the svirfnebli off balance. The hunter
kicked at their knees and dropped to his own, turning about as he fell and
launching the two svirfnebli into headlong rolls.
The hunter was up at once, broken scimitars at the ready as a single foe moved
in at him.
Belwar showed no fear, held his arms defenselessly out wide. "Drizzt!" he called
over and over. "Drizzt Do'Urden!"
The hunter eyed the svirfneblin's hammer and pick, and the sight of the mithril
hands invoked soothing memories. Suddenly, he was Drizzt again. Stunned and
ashamed, he dropped the poles and eyed his scraped hands.
Belwar caught the drow as he swooned, hoisted him up in his arms and carried
him back to his hammock.
"Troubled dreams invaded Drizzt's sleep, memories of the Underdark and of that
other, darker self that he could not escape.
"How can I explain?" he asked Belwar when the burrow-warden found him sitting
on the edge of the stone table later that night. "How can I possibly offer an
apology?"
"None is needed:' Belwar said to him.
Drizzt looked at him incredulously. "You do not understand:' Drizzt began,
wondering how he could possibly make the burrow-warden comprehend the
depth of what had come over him.
"Many years you have lived out in the Underdark:' Belwar said, "surviving where
others could not:'
"But have I survived?" Drizzt wondered aloud.
Belwar's hammer-hand patted the drow's shoulder gently, and the burrowwarden
sat down on the table beside him. There they remained throughout the
night. Drizzt said no more, and Belwar didn't press him. The burrow-warden knew
his role that night: a silent support.
Neither knew how many hours had passed when Seldig's voice came in from
beyond the door. "Come, Drizzt Do'Urden:' the young deep gnome called. "Come
and tell us more tales of the Underdark:'
Drizzt looked at Belwar curiously, wondering if the request was part of some
devious trick or ironic joke.
Belwar's smile dispelled that notion. "Magga cammara, dark elf:' the deep gnome
chuckled. "They'll not let you hide:'
"Send them away:' Drizzt insisted.
"So willing are you to surrender?" Belwar retorted, a distinct edge to his normally
round-toned voice. "You who have survived the trials of the wilds?"
"Too dangerous:' Drizzt explained desperately, searching for the words. "I cannot
control. . . cannot be rid of . . :'
"Go with them, dark elf" Belwar said. "They will be more cautious this time:'
"This. . . beast. . . follows me:' Drizzt tried to explain.
"Perhaps for a while:' the burrow-warden replied casually. "Magga cammara,
Drizzt Do'Urden! Five weeks is not such a long time, not measured against the
trials you have endured over the last ten years. Your freedom will be gained from
this. . . beast:' Drizzt's lavender eyes found only sincerity in Belwar Dissengulp's
dark gray orbs.
"But only if you seek it,' the burrow-warden finished.
"Come out, Drizzt Do'Urden,' Seldig called again from beyond the stone door.
This time, and every time in the days to come, Drizzt, and only Drizzt, answered
the call.
The myconid king watched the dark elf prowl across the cavern's moss-covered
lower level. It was not the same drow that had left, the fungoid knew, but Drizzt,
an ally, had been the king's only previous contact with the dark elves. Oblivious
to its peril, the eleven-foot giant crept down to intercept the stranger.
The spirit-wraith of Zaknafein did not even attempt to flee or hide as the animated
mushroom-man closed in. Zaknafein's swords were comfortably set in his hands.
The myconid king puffed a cloud of spores, seeking a telepathic conversation
with the newcomer.
But undead monsters existed on two distinct planes, and their minds were
impervious to such attempts. Zaknafein's material body faced the myconid, but
the spirit-wraith's mind was far distant, linked to his corporeal form by Matron
Malice's will. The spirit-wraith closed over the last few feet to his adversary.
The myconid puffed a second cloud, this one of spores designed to pacify an
opponent, and this cloud was equally futile. The spirit-wraith came on steadily,
and the giant raised its powerful arms to strike it down.
Zaknafein blocked the swings with quick cuts of his razor-edged swords,
severing the myconid's hands. Too fast to follow, the spirit-wraith's weapons
slashed at the king's mushroomlike torso, and dug deep wounds that drove the
fungoid backward and to the ground.
From the top level, dozens of the older and stronger myconids lumbered down to
rescue their injured king. The spirit-wraith saw their approach but did not know
fear. Zaknafein finished his business with the giant, then turned calmly to meet
the assault.
Fungus-men came on, blasting their various spores. Zaknafein ignored the
clouds, none of which could possibly affect him, and concentrated fully on the
clubbing arms. Myconids came charging in all around him.
And they died all around him.
They had tended their grove for centuries untold, living in peace and going about
their own way. But when the spirit-wraith returned from the crawl-tunnel that led
to the now-abandoned small cave that once had served as Drizzt's home, Zak's
fury would tolerate no semblance of peace. Zaknafein rushed up the wall to the
mushroom grove, hacking at everything in his path.
Giant mushrooms tumbled like cut trees. Below, the small rothe herd, nervous by
nature, broke into a frenzied stampede and rushed out into the tunnels of the
open Underdark. The few remaining fungus-men, having witnessed the power of
this dark elf, scrambled to get out of his thrashing way. But myconids were not
fast-moving creatures, and Zaknafein relentlessly chased them down.
Their reign in the moss-covered cave, and the mushroom grove they had tended
for so very long, came to a sudden and final end.
CHAPTER 9
WHISPERS IN THE TUNNELS
The svirfneblin patrol inched its way around the bends of the broken and twisting
tunnel, war hammers and pickaxes held at the ready. The deep gnomes were not
far from Blingdenstone-less than a day out-but they had gone into their practiced
battle formations usually reserved for the deep Underdark.
The tunnel reeked of death.
The lead deep gnome, knowing that the carnage lay just beyond, gingerly
peeked over a boulder. Goblins! his senses cried out to his companions, a clear
voice in the racial empathy of the svirfnebli. When the dangers of the Underdark
closed in on the deep gnomes, they rarely spoke aloud, reverting to a communal
empathic bond that could convey basic thoughts.
The other svirfnebli clutched their weapons and began deciphering a battle plan
from the excited jumble of their mental communications. The leader, still the only
one who had peered over the boulder, halted them with an overriding notion.
Dead goblins!
The others followed him around the boulder to the grisly scene. A score of
goblins lay about, hacked and torn. "Drow:' one of the svirfneblin party
whispered, after seeing the precision of the wounds and the obvious ease with
which the blades had cut through the unfortunate creatures' hides. Among the
Underdark races, only the drow wielded such slender and wicked-edged blades.
Too close, another deep gnome responded empathetically, punching the speaker
on the shoulder. "These have been dead for a day and more,' another said aloud,
refuting his companion's caution. "The dark elves would not lie in wait in the area.
It is not their way:'
"Nor is it their way to slaughter bands of goblins,' the one who had insisted on the
silent communications replied. "Not when there are prisoners to be taken!"
"They would take prisoners only if they meant to return directly to
Menzoberranzan,' remarked the first. He turned to the leader. "Burrow-Warden
Krieger, at once we must go back to Blingdenstone and report this carnage!"
"A thin report it would be,' Krieger replied. "Dead goblins in the tunnels? It is not
such an uncommon sight:'
"This is not the first sign of drow activity in the region,' the other remarked. The
burrow-warden could deny neither the truth of his companion's words nor the
wisdom of the suggestion. Two other patrols had returned to Blingdenstone
recently with tales of dead monsters-most probably slain by drow elves-lying in
the corridors of the Underdark.
"And look,' the other deep gnome continued, bending low to scoop a pouch off
one of the goblins. He opened it to reveal a handful of gold and silver coins.
"What dark elf would be so impatient as to leave such booty behind?"
"Can we be sure that this was the doings of the drow?" Krieger asked, though he
himself did not doubt the fact. "Perhaps some other creature has come to our
realm. Or possibly some lesser foe, goblin or orc, has found drow weapons:'
Drow! the thoughts of several of the others agreed immediately.
"The cuts were swift and precise,' said one. "And I see nothing to indicate any
wounds beyond those suffered by the goblins. Who else but dark elves are so
efficient in their killing'?"
Burrow-Warden Krieger walked off alone a bit farther down the passage,
searching the stone for some clue to this mystery. Deep gnomes possessed an
affinity to the rock beyond that of most creatures, but this passage's stone walls
told the burrow-warden nothing. The goblins had been killed by weapons, not the
clawed hands of monsters, yet they hadn't been looted. All of the kills were
confined to a small area, showing that the unfortunate goblins hadn't even found
the time to flee. That twenty goblins were cut down so quickly implicated a drow
patrol of some size, and even if there had been only a handful of the dark elves,
one of them, at least, would have pillaged the bodies.
"Where shall we go, Burrow-Warden?" one of the deep gnomes asked at
Krieger's back. "Onward to scout out the reported mineral cache or back to
Blingdenstone to report this?"
Krieger was a wily old svirfneblin who thought that he knew every trick of the
Underdark. He wasn't fond of mysteries, but this scene had him scratching his
bald head with out a clue. Back, he relayed to the others, reverting to the silent
empathic method. He found no arguments among his kin, deep gnomes always
took great care to avoid drow elves whenever possible.
The patrol promptly shifted into a tight defensive formation and began its trek
back home.
Levitating off to the side, in the shadows of the high ceiling's stalactites, the spiritwraith
of Zaknafein Do'Urden watched their progress and marked well their path.
King Schnicktick leaned forward in his stone throne and considered the burrowwarden's
words carefully. Schnicktick's councilors, seated around him, were
equally curious and nervous, for this report only confirmed the two previous tales
of potential drow activity in the eastern tunnels.
"Why would Menzoberranzan be edging in on our borders?" one of the councilors
asked when Krieger had finished. "Our agents have made no mention of any
intent of war. Surely we would have had some indications if Menzoberranzan's
ruling council planned something dramatic:'
"We would,' King Schnicktick agreed, to silence the nervous chatter that sprang
up in the wake of the councilor's grim words. "To all of you I offer the reminder
that we do not know if the perpetrators of these reported kills were drow elves at
all:'
"Your pardon, my King:' Krieger began tentatively.
"Yes, Burrow-Warden,' Schnicktick replied immediately, slowly waving one
stubby hand before his craggy face to prevent any protests. "You are quite
certain of your observations. And well enough do I know you to trust in your
judgments. Until this drow patrol has been seen, however, no assumptions will I
make:'
"Then we may agree only that something dangerous has invaded our eastern
region:' another of the councilors put in.
"Yes:' answered the svirfneblin king. "We must set about discovering the truth of
the matter. The eastern tunnels are therefore sealed from further mining
expeditions:' Schnicktick again waved his hands to calm the ensuing groans. "I
know that several promising veins of ore have been reported-we will get to them
as soon as we may. But for the present, the east, northeast, and southeast
regions are hereby declared war patrol exclusive. The patrols will be doubled,
both in the number of groups and in the size of each, and their range will be
extended to encompass all the region within a three-day march of Blingdenstone.
Quickly must this mystery be resolved:'
"What of our agents in the drow city?" asked a councilor. "Should we
make contact?"
Schnicktick held his palms out. "Be at ease:' he explained. "We will keep our ears
open wide, but let us not inform our enemies that we suspect their movements:'
The svirfneblin king did not have to express his concerns that their agents within
Menzoberranzan could not be entirely relied upon. The informants might readily
accept svirfneblin gemstones in exchange for minor information, but if the powers
of Menzoberranzan were planning something drastic in Blingdenstone's direction,
agents would quite likely work double-deals against the deep gnomes.
"If we hear any unusual reports from Menzoberranzan, the king continued, "or if
we discover that the intruders are indeed drow elves, then we will increase our
network's actions. Until then, let the patrols learn what they may:'
The king dismissed his council then, preferring to remain alone in his throne
room to consider the grim news. Earlier that same week, Schnicktick had heard
of Drizzt's savage attack on the basilisk effigy.
Lately, it seemed, King Schnicktick of Blingdenstone had heard too much of dark
elves' exploits.
The svirfneblin scouting patrols moved farther out into the eastern tunnels. Even
those groups that found nothing came back to Blingdenstone full of suspicions,
for they had sensed a stillness in the Underdark beyond the quiet norm. Not a
single svirfneblin had been injured so far, but none seemed anxious to travel out
on the patrols. There was something evil in the tunnels, they knew instinctively,
something that killed without question and without mercy.
One patrol found the moss-covered cavern that once had served as Drizzt's
sanctuary. King Schnicktick was saddened when he heard that the peaceable
myconids and their treasured mushroom grove were destroyed.
Yet, for all of the endless hours the svirfnebli spent wandering the tunnels, not an
enemy did they spot. They continued with their assumption that dark elves, so
secretive and brutal, were involved.
"And we now have a drow living in our city:' a deep gnome councilor reminded
the king during one of their daily sessions.
"Has he caused any trouble?" Schnicktick asked
"Minor:' replied the councilor. "And Belwar Dissengulp, the Most Honored
Burrow-Warden, speaks for him still and keeps him in his house as guest, not
prisoner. Burrow-Warden Dissengulp will accept no guards around the drow:'
"Have the drow watched:' the king said after a moment of consideration. "But
from a distance. If he is a friend, as Master Dissengulp most obviously believes,
then he should not suffer our intrusions:'
"And what of the patrols?" asked another councilor, this one a representative
from the entrance cavern that housed the city guard. "My soldiers grow weary.
They have seen nothing beyond a few signs of battle, have heard nothing but the
scrape of their own tired feet:'
"We must be alert,' King Schnicktick reminded him. "If the dark elves are
massing. . :'
"They are not,' the councilor replied firmly. "We have found no camp, nor any
trace of a camp. This patrol from Menzoberranzan, if it is a patrol, attacks and
then retreats to some sanctuary we cannot locate, possibly magically inspired:'
"And if the dark elves truly meant to attack Blingdenstone,' offered another,
"would they leave so many signs of their activity? The first slaughter, the goblins
found by Burrow-Warden Krieger's expedition, occurred nearly a week ago, and
the tragedy of the myconids was some time before that. I have never heard of
dark elves wandering about an enemy city, and leaving signs such as
slaughtered goblins, for days before they execute their full attack:'
The king had been thinking along the same lines for some time. When he awoke
each day and found Blingdenstone intact, the threat of a war with
Menzoberranzan seemed more distant. But, though Schnicktick took comfort in
the similar reasoning of his councilor, he could not ignore the gruesome scenes
his soldiers had been finding in the eastern tunnels. Something, probably drow,
was down there, too close for his liking.
"Let us assume that Menzoberranzan does not plan war against us at this time,'
Schnicktick offered. "Then why are drow elves so close to our doorway? Why
would drow elves haunt the eastern tunnels of Blingdenstone, so far from home?"
"Expansion?" replied one councilor.
"Renegade raiders?" questioned another. Neither possibility seemed very likely.
Then a third councilor chirped in a suggestion, so simple that it caught the others
off guard.
"They are looking for something:'
The king of the svirfnebli dropped his dimpled chin heavily into his hands,
thinking he had just heard a possible solution to the puzzle and feeling foolish
that he had not thought of it before.
"But what?" asked one of the councilors, obviously feeling the same. "Dark elves
rarely mine the stone-they do not do it very well when they try, I must add-and
they would not have to go so far from Menzoberranzan to find precious minerals.
What, so near to Blingdenstone, might the dark elves be looking for?"
"Something they have lost:' replied the king. Immediately his thoughts went to the
drow that had come to live among his people. It all seemed too much of a
coincidence to be ignored. "Or someone:' Schnicktick added, and the others did
not miss his point.
"Perhaps we should invite our drow guest to sit with us in council?"
"No:' the king replied. "But perhaps our distant surveillance of this Drizzt is not
enough. Get orders to Belwar Dissengulp that the drow is to be monitored every
minute. And, Firble:' he said to the councilor nearest him. "Since we have
reasonably concluded that no war is imminent with the dark elves, set the spy
network into motion. Get me information from Menzoberranzan, and quickly. I like
not the prospect of dark elves wandering about my front door. It does so diminish
the neighborhood:'
Councilor Firble, the chief of covert security in Blingdenstone, nodded in
agreement, though he wasn't pleased by the request. Information from
Menzoberranzan was not cheaply gained, and it as often turned out to be a
calculated deception as the truth. Firble did not like dealing with anyone or
anything that could outsmart him, and he numbered dark elves as first on that illfavored
list.
The spirit-wraith watched as yet another svirfneblin patrol made its way down the
twisting tunnel. The tactical wisdom of the being that once had been the finest
weapon master in all of Menzoberranzan had kept the undead monster and his
anxious sword arm in check for the last few days. Zaknafein did not truly
understand the significance of the increasing number of deep gnome patrols, but
he sensed that his mission would be put into jeopardy if he struck out against one
of them. At the very least, his attack against so organized a foe would send
alarms ringing throughout the corridors, alarms that the elusive Drizzt surely
would hear.
Similarly, the spirit-wraith had sublimated his vicious urges against other living
things and had left the svirfneblin patrols nothing to find in the last few days,
purposely avoiding conflicts with the many denizens of the region. Matron Malice
Do'Urden's evil will followed Zaknafein's every move, pounding relentlessly at his
thoughts, urging him on with a great vengeance. Any killing that Zaknafein did
sated that insidious will temporarily, but the undead thing's tactical wisdom
overruled the savage summons. The slight flicker that was Zaknafein's remaining
reasoning knew that he would only find his return to the peace of death when
Drizzt Do'Urden joined him in his eternal sleep.
The spirit-wraith kept his swords in their sheaths as he watched the deep
gnomes pass by.
Then, as still another group of weary svirfnebli made its way back to the west,
another flicker of cognition stirred within the spirit-wraith. If these deep gnomes
were so prominent in this region, it seemed likely that Drizzt Do'Urden would
have encountered them.
This time, Zaknafein did not let the deep gnomes wander out beyond his sight.
He floated down from the concealment of the stalactite-strewn ceiling and fell into
pace behind the patrol. The name of Blingdenstone bobbed at the edge of his
conscious grasp, a memory of his past life.
"Blingdenstone,' the spirit-wraith tried to speak aloud, the first word Matron
Malice's undead monster had tried to utter. But the name came out as no more
than an undecipherable snarl.
CHAPTER 10
BELWAR'S GUILT
Drizzt went out with Seldig and his new friends many times during the passing
days. The young deep gnomes, on advice from Belwar, kept their time with the
drow elf in calm and unobtrusive games, no more did they press Drizzt for
reenactments of exciting battles he had fought in the wilds.
For the first few times Drizzt went out, Belwar watched him from the door. The
burrow-warden did trust Drizzt, but he also understood the trials the drow had
endured. A life of savagery and brutality such as the one Drizzt had known could
not so easily be dismissed.
Soon, though, it became apparent to Belwar, and to all the others who observed
Drizzt, that the drow had settled into a comfortable rhythm with the young deep
gnomes and posed little threat to any of the svirfnebli of Blingdenstone. Even
King Schnicktick, worried of the events beyond the city's borders, came to agree
that Drizzt could be trusted.
"You have a visitor,' Belwar said to Drizzt one morning. Drizzt followed the
burrow-warden's movements to the stone door, thinking Seldig had come to call
on him early this day. When Belwar opened the door, though, Drizzt nearly
toppled over in surprise, for it was no svirfneblin that bounded into the stone
structure. Rather, it was a huge and black feline form.
"Guenhwyvar!" Drizzt cried out, dropping into a low crouch to catch the rushing
panther. Guenhwyvar bowled him over, playfully swatting him with a great paw.
When at last Drizzt managed to get out from under the panther and into a sitting
position, Belwar walked over to him and handed him the onyx figurine. "Surely
the councilor charged with examining the panther was sorry to part with it,' the
burrow-warden said. "But Guenhwyvar is your friend, first and most:'
Drizzt could not find the words to reply. Even before the panther's return, the
deep gnomes of Blingdenstone had treated him better than he deserved, or so
he believed. Now for the svirfnebli to return so powerful a magical item, to show
him such absolute trust, touched him deeply.
"At your leisure you may return to the House Center, the building in which you
were detained when first you came to us,' Belwar went on, "and retrieve your
weapons and armor:'
Drizzt was a bit tentative at the notion, remembering the incident at the mock-up
of the basilisk. What damage might he have wrought that day if he had been
armed, not with poles, but with fine drow scimitars?
"We will keep them here and keep them safe,' Belwar said, understanding his
friend's sudden distress. "If you need them, you will have them:'
"I am in your debt,' Drizzt replied. "In the debt of all Blingdenstone:'
"We do not consider friendship a debt,' the burrow-warden replied with a wink. He
left Drizzt and Guenhwyvar then and went back into the cave-room of his house,
allowing the two dear friends a private reunion.
Seldig and the other young deep gnomes were in for quite a treat that day when
Drizzt came out to join them with Guenhwyvar by his side. Seeing the cat at play
with the
svirfnebli, Drizzt could not help but remember that tragic day, a decade before,
when Masoj had used Guenhwyvar to hunt down the last of Belwar's fleeing
miners. Apparently,
Guenhwyvar had dismissed that awful memory altogether, for the panther and
the young deep gnomes frolicked together for the entire day.
Drizzt wished only that he could so readily dismiss the errors of his past.
"Most Honored Burrow-Warden,' came a call a couple of days later, while Belwar
and Drizzt were enjoying their morning meal. Belwar paused and sat perfectly
still, and
Drizzt did not miss the unexpected cloud of pain that crossed his host's broad
features. Drizzt had come to know the svirfneblin so very well, and when Belwar's
long, hawk-like nose turned up in a certain way, it inevitably signaled the burrowwarden's
distress.
"The king has reopened the eastern tunnels,' the voice continued. "There are
rumors of a thick vein of ore only a day's march. It would do honor to my
expedition if Belwar
Dissengulp would find his way to accompany us:'
A hopeful smile widened on Drizzt's face, not for any thoughts he had of
venturing out, but because he had noticed that Belwar seemed a bit too reclusive
in the otherwise open svirfneblin community.
"Burrow-Warden Brickers,' Belwar explained to Drizzt grimly, not sharing the
drow's budding enthusiasm in the least. "One of those who comes to my door
before every expedition, bidding me to join in the journey:'
"And you never go,' Drizzt reasoned.
Belwar shrugged. "A courtesy call, nothing more,' he said, his nose twitching and
his wide teeth grating together.
"You are not worthy to march beside them,' Drizzt added, his tone dripping with
sarcasm. At last, he believed, he had found the source of his friend's frustration.
Again Belwar shrugged.
Drizzt scowled at him. "I have seen you at work with your mithril hands,' he said.
"You would be no detriment to any party! Indeed, far more! Do you so quickly
consider yourself crippled, when those about you do not?"
Belwar slammed his hammer-hand down on the table, sending a fair-sized crack
running through the stone. "I can cut rock faster than the lot of them!" the burrowwarden
growled fiercely. " And if monsters descended upon us . . :' He waved his
pickaxe-hand in a menacing way, and Drizzt did not doubt that the barrel-chested
deep gnome could put the instrument to good use.
"Enjoy the day, Most Honored Burrow-Warden,' came a final cry from outside the
door. "As ever, we shall respect your decision, but, as ever, we also shall lament
your absence.'
Drizzt stared curiously at Belwar. "Why, then?" he asked at length. "If you are as
competent as all-yourself included-agree, why do you remain behind? I know the
love svirfnebli have for such expeditions, yet you are not interested. Nor do you
ever speak of your own adventures outside Blingdenstone. Is it my presence that
holds you at home? Are you bound to watch over me?"
"No,' Belwar replied, his booming voice echoing back several times in Drizzt's
keen ears. "You have been granted the return of your weapons, dark elf. Do not
doubt our trust.'
"But. . ?' Drizzt began, but he stopped short, suddenly realizing the truth of the
deep gnome's reluctance. "The fight,' he said softly, almost apologetically. "That
evil day more than a decade ago?'
Belwar's nose verily rolled up over itself, and he briskly turned away.
"You blame yourself for the loss of your kin!" Drizzt continued, gaining volume as
he gained confidence in his reasoning. Still, the drow could hardly believe his
words as he spoke them.
But when Belwar turned back on him, the burrow-warden's eyes were rimmed
with wetness and Drizzt knew that the words had struck home.
Drizzt ran a hand through his thick white mane, not really knowing how to
respond to Belwar's dilemma. Drizzt personally had led the drow party against
the svirfnebli mining group, and he knew that no blame for the disaster could
rightly be placed on any of the deep gnomes. Yet, how could Drizzt possibly
explain that to Belwar?
"I remember that fated day,' Drizzt began tentatively. "Vividly I remember it, as if
that evil moment will be frozen in my thoughts, never to recede.'
"No more than in mine,' the burrow-warden whispered.
Drizzt nodded his accord. "Equally, though,' he said, "for I find myself caught
within the very same web of guilt that entraps you:'
Belwar looked at him curiously, not really understanding.
"It was I who led the drow patrol,' Drizzt explained. "I found your troupe, errantly
believing you to be marauders intending to descend upon Menzoberranzan:'
"If not you, then another,' Belwar replied.
"But none could have led them as well as I,' Drizzt said. "Out there-" he glanced
at the door-"in the wilds, I was at home. That was my domain:'
Belwar was listening to his every word now, just as Drizzt had hoped.
"And it was I who defeated the earth elemental,' Drizzt continued, speaking
matter-of-factly, not cockily. "Had it not been for my presence, the battle would
have proved equal. Many svirfnebli would have survived to return to
Blingdenstone:'
Belwar could not hide his smile. There was a measure of truth in Drizzt's words,
for Drizzt had indeed been a major factor in the drow attack's success. But
Belwar found
Drizzt's attempt to dispel his guilt a bit of a stretch of the truth.
"I do not understand how you can blame yourself,' Drizzt said, now smiling and
hoping that his levity would bring some measure of comfort to his friend. "With
Drizzt Do'Urden at the lead of the drow party, you never had a chance:'
"Magga cammara! It is a painful subject to jest of,' Belwar replied, though he
chuckled in spite of himself even as he spoke the words.
"Agreed,' said Drizzt, his tone suddenly serious. "But dismissing the tragedy in a
jest is no more ridiculous than living mired in guilt for a blameless incident. No,
not blameless,' Drizzt quickly corrected himself. "The blame lies on the shoulders
of Menzoberranzan and its inhabitants. It is the way of the drow that caused the
tragedy. It is the wicked existence they live, every day, that doomed your
expedition's peaceable miners:'
"Charged with the responsibility of his group is a burrow-warden,' Belwar
retorted. "Only a burrow-warden may call an expedition. He must then accept the
responsibility of his decision:'
"You chose to lead the deep gnomes so close to Menzoberranzan?" Drizzt
asked.
"I did:'
"Of your own volition?" Drizzt pressed. He believed that he understood the ways
of the deep gnomes well enough to know that most, if not all, of their important
decisions were democratically resolved. "Without the word of Belwar Dissengulp,
the mining party would never have come into that region?"
"We knew of the find,' Belwar explained. "A rich cache of ore. It was decided in
council that we should risk the nearness to Menzoberranzan. I led the appointed
party:'
"If not you, then another,' Drizzt said pointedly, mimicking Belwar's earlier words.
"A burrow-warden must accept the respons- . . :' Belwar began, his gaze drifting
away from Drizzt.
"They do not blame you,' Drizzt said, following Belwar's empty stare to the blank
stone door. "They honor you and care for you:'
"They pity me!" Belwar snarled.
"Do you need their pity?" Drizzt cried back. "Are you less than they? A helpless
cripple?"
"Never I was!"
"Then go out with them!" Drizzt yelled at him. "See if they truly pity you. I do not
believe that at all, but if your assumptions prove true, if your people do pity their
'Most Honored Burrow-Warden, then show them the truth of Belwar Dissengulp!
If your companions mantle upon you neither pity nor blame, then do not place
either burden upon your own shoulders!"
Belwar stared at his friend for a very long moment, but he did not reply.
"All the miners who accompanied you knew the risk of venturing so close to
Menzoberranzan,' Drizzt reminded him. A smile widened on Drizzt's face. "None
of them, yourself included, knew that Drizzt Do'Urden would lead your drow
opponents against you. If you had, you certainly would have stayed at home:'
"Magga cammara,' Belwar mumbled. He shook his head in disbelief, both at
Drizzt's joking attitude and at the fact that, for the first time in over a decade, he
did feel better about those tragic memories. He rose up from the stone table,
flashed a grin at Drizzt, and headed for the inner room of his house.
"Where are you going?" Drizzt asked.
"To rest,' replied the burrow-warden. "The events of this day have already
wearied me:'
"The mining expedition will depart without you:'
Belwar turned back and cast an incredulous stare at Drizzt. Did the drow really
expect that Belwar would so easily refute years of guilt and just go bounding off
with the miners?
"I had thought Belwar Dissengulp possessed more courage,' Drizzt said to him.
The scowl that crossed the burrow-warden's face was genuine, and Drizzt knew
that he had found a weakness in Belwar's armor of self-pity.
"Boldly do you speak,' Belwar growled through a grimace.
"Boldly to a coward,' Drizzt replied. The mithril handed svirfneblin stalked in, his
breathing coming in great heaves of his densely muscled chest.
"If you do not like the title, then cast it away!" Drizzt growled in his face. "Go with
the miners. Show them the truth of Belwar Dissengulp, and learn it for yourself!"
Belwar banged his mithril hands together. "Run out then and get your weapons!"
he commanded. Drizzt hesitated. Had he just been challenged? Had he gone too
far in his attempt to shake the burrow-warden loose of his guilty bonds?
"Get your weapons, Drizzt Do'Urden,' Belwar growled again, "for if I am to go with
the miners, then so are you!"
Elated, Drizzt clasped the deep gnome's head between his long, slender hands
and banged his forehead softly into Belwar's, the two exchanging stares of deep
admiration and affection. In an instant, Drizzt rushed away, scrambling to the
House Central to retrieve his suit of finely meshed chain mail, his piwafwi, and
his scimitars.
Belwar just banged a hand against his head in disbelief, nearly knocking himself
from his feet, and watched Drizzt's wild dash out of the front door.
It would prove an interesting trip.
Burrow-Warden Brickers accepted Belwar and Drizzt readily, though he gave
Belwar a curious look behind Drizzt's back, inquiring as to the drow's
respectability. Even the doubting burrow-warden could not deny the value of a
dark elf ally out in the wilds of the Underdark, particularly if the whispers of drow
activity in the eastern tunnels proved to be true.
But the patrol saw no activity, or carnage, as they proceeded to the region
named by the scouts. The rumors of a thick vein of ore were not exaggerated in
the least, and the twenty-five miners of the expedition went to work with an
eagerness unlike any the drow had ever witnessed. Drizzt was especially
pleased for Belwar, for the burrow-warden's hammer and pickaxe hands chopped
away at the stone with a precision and power that outdid any of the others. It
didn't take long for Belwar to realize that he was not being pitied by his comrades
in any way. He was a member of the expedition-an honored member and no
detriment-who filled the wagons with more ore than any of his companions.
Through the days they spent in the twisting tunnels, Drizzt, and Guenhwyvar,
when the cat was available, kept a watchful guard around the camp. After the
first day of mining, Burrow-Warden Brickers assigned a third companion guard
for the drow and panther, and Drizzt suspected correctly that his new svirfneblin
companion had been appointed as much to watch him as to look for dangers
from beyond. As the time passed, though, and the svirfneblin troupe became
more accustomed to their ebony-skinned companion, Drizzt was left to roam
about as he chose.
It was an uneventful and profitable trip, just the way the svirfnebli liked it, and
soon, having encountered not a single monster, their wagons were filled with
precious minerals.
Clapping each other on the backs-Belwar being careful not to pat too hard-they
gathered up their equipment, formed their pull-carts into a line, and set off for
home, a journey that would take them two days bearing the heavy wagons.
After only a few hours of travel, one of the scouts ahead of the caravan returned,
his face grim.
"What is it?" Burrow-Warden Brickers prompted, suspecting that their good
fortune had ended.
"Goblin tribe:' the svirfneblin scout replied. "Two score at the least. They have put
up in a small chamber ahead to the west and up a sloping passage,'
Burrow-Warden Brickers banged a fist into a wagon. He did not doubt that his
miners could handle the goblin band, but he wanted no trouble. Yet with the
heavy wagons rumbling along noisily, avoiding the goblins would be no easy feat.
"Pass the word back that we sit quiet:' he decided at length. "If a fight there will
be, let the goblins come to us,'
"What is the trouble?" Drizzt asked Belwar as he came in at the back of the
caravan. He had kept a rear guard since the troupe had broken camp.
"Band of goblins:' Belwar replied. "Brickers says we stay low and hope they pass
us by,'
"And if they do not?" Drizzt had to ask.
Belwar tapped his hands together. "They're only goblins,' he muttered grimly, "but
I, and all my kin, wish the path had stayed clear,'
It pleased Drizzt that his new companions were not so anxious for battle, even
against an enemy they knew they could easily defeat. If Drizzt had been traveling
beside a drow party, the whole of the goblin tribe probably would be dead or
captured already.
"Come with me,' Drizzt said to Belwar. "I need you to help Burrow-Warden
Brickers understand me. I have a plan, but I fear that my limited command of
your language will not allow me to explain its subtleties:'
Belwar hooked Drizzt with his pickaxe-hand, spinning the slender drow about
more roughly than he had intended.
"No conflicts do we desire,' he explained. "Better that the goblins go their own
way:'
"I wish for no fight,' Drizzt assured him with a wink. Satisfied, the deep gnome fell
into step behind Drizzt.
Brickers smiled widely as Belwar translated Drizzt's plan.
"The expressions on the goblins' faces will be well worth seeing,' Brickers
laughed to Drizzt. "I should like to accompany you myself!"
"Better left for me,' Belwar said. "Both the goblin and drow languages are known
to me, and you have responsibilities back here, in case things do not go as we
hope:'
"The goblin tongue is known to me as well,' Brickers replied. "And I can
understand our dark elf companion well enough. As for my duties with the
caravan, they are not as great as you believe, for another burrow-warden
accompanies us this day:'
"One who has not seen the wilds of the Underdark for many years,' Belwar
reminded him.
"Ah, but he was the finest of his trade,' retorted Brickers. "The caravan is under
your command, Burrow-Warden Belwar. I choose to go and meet with the goblins
beside the drow:'
Drizzt had understood enough of the words to fathom Brickers's general course
of action. Before Belwar could argue, Drizzt put a hand on his shoulder and
nodded. "If the goblins are not fooled and we need you, come in fast and hard,'
he said.
Then Brickers removed his gear and weapons, and Drizzt led him away. Belwar
turned to the others cautiously, not knowing how they would feel about the
decision. His first glance at the caravan's miners told him that they stood firmly
behind him, every one, waiting and willing to carry out his commands. Burrow-
Warden Brickers was not the least disappointed with the expressions on the
goblins' toothy and twisted faces when he and Drizzt walked into their midst. One
goblin let out a shriek and lifted a spear to throw, but Drizzt, using his innate
magical abilities, dropped a globe of darkness over its head, blinding it fully. The
spear came out anyway and Drizzt snapped out a scimitar and sliced it from the
air as it flew by.
Brickers, his hands bound, for he was emulating a prisoner in this farce, dropped
his jaw open at the speed and ease with which the drow took down the flying
spear. The svirfneblin then looked to the band of goblins and saw that they were
similarly impressed.
"One more step and they are dead,' Drizzt promised in the goblin tongue, a
guttural language of grunts and whimpers. Brickers came to understand a
moment later when he heard a wild shuffle of boots and a whimper from behind.
The deep gnome turned to see two goblins, limned by the dancing purplish
flames of the drow's faerie fire, scrambling away as fast as their floppy feet could
carry them.
Again the svirfneblin looked at Drizzt in amazement. How had Drizzt even known
that the sneaky goblins were back there?
Brickers, of course, could not know of the hunter, that other self of Drizzt
Do'Urden that gave this drow a distinct edge in encounters such as this. Nor
could the burrow-warden know that at that moment Drizzt was engaged in yet
another struggle to control that dangerous alter ego.
Drizzt looked at the scimitar in his hand and back to the crowd of goblins. At least
three dozen of them stood ready, yet the hunter beckoned Drizzt to attack, to bite
hard into the cowardly monsters and send them fleeing down every passageway
leading out of the room. One look at his bound svirfneblin companion, though,
reminded Drizzt of his plan in coming here and allowed him to put the hunter to
rest.
"Who is the leader?" he asked in guttural goblin.
The goblin chieftain was not so anxious to single itself out to a drow elf, but a
dozen of its subordinates, showing typical goblin courage and loyalty, spun on
their heels and poked their stubby fingers in its direction.
With no other choice, the goblin chieftain puffed out its chest, straightened its
bony shoulders, and strode forward to face the drow. "Bruck!" the chieftain
named itself, thumping a fist into its chest.
"Why are you here?" Drizzt sneered as he said it.
Bruck simply did not know how to answer such a question. Never before had the
goblin thought to ask permission for its tribe's movements.
"This region belongs to the drow!" Drizzt growled. "You do not belong here!"
"Drow city many walks,' Bruck complained, pointing over Drizzt's head-the wrong
way to Menzoberranzan, Drizzt noted, but he let the error pass. "This svirfneblin
land:'
"For now,' replied Drizzt, prodding Brickers with the butt of his scimitar. "But my
people have decided to claim the region as our own:' A small flame flickered in
Drizzt's lavender eyes and a devious smile spread across his face. "Will Bruck
and the goblin tribe oppose us?"
Bruck held its long-fingered hands out helplessly.
"Be gone!" Drizzt demanded. "We have no need of slaves now, nor do we wish
the revealing sound of battle echoing down the tunnels! Name yourself as lucky,
Bruck. Your tribe will flee and live. . . this time!"
Bruck turned to the others, looking for some assistance. Only one drow elf had
come against them, while more than three dozen goblins stood ready with their
weapons. The odds were promising if not overwhelming.
"Be gone!" Drizzt commanded, pointing his scimitar at a side passage. "Run until
your feet grow too weary to carry you!"
The goblin chieftain defiantly hooked its fingers into the piece of rope holding up
its loincloth.
A cacophonous banging sounded all around the small chamber then, showing
the tempo of purposeful drumming on the stone. Bruck and the other goblins
looked around nervously, and Drizzt did not miss the opportunity.
"You dare defy us?" the drow cried, causing Bruck to be edged by the purpleglowing
flames. "Then let stupid Bruck be the first to die!"
Before Drizzt even finished the sentence, the goblin chieftain was gone, running
with all speed down the passage Drizzt had indicated. Justifying the flight as
loyalty to their chieftain, the whole lot of the goblin tribe set off in quick pursuit.
The swiftest even passed Bruck by.
A few moments later, Belwar and the other svirfneblin miners appeared at every
passage. "Thought you might need some support:' the mithril-handed burrowwarden
explained, tapping his hammer hand on the stone.
"Perfect was your timing and your judgment, Most Honored Burrow-Warden:'
Brickers said to his peer when he managed to stop laughing. "Perfect, as we
have come to expect from Belwar Dissengulp!"
A short while later, the svirfneblin caravan started on its way again, the whole
troupe excited and elated by the events of the last few days. The deep gnomes
thought themselves very clever in the way they had avoided trouble. The gaiety
turned into a full-fledged party when they arrived in Blingdenstone-and svirfnebli,
though usually a serious, work-minded people, threw parties as well as any race
in all the Realms.
Drizzt Do'Urden, for all of his physical differences with the svirfnebli, felt more at
home and at ease than he had ever felt in all the four decades of his life.
And never again did Belwar Dissengulp flinch when a fellow svirfneblin
addressed him as "Most Honored Burrow-Warden:'
The spirit-wraith was confused. Just as Zaknafein had begun to believe that his
prey was within the svirfneblin city, the magical spells that Malice had placed
upon him sensed Drizzt's presence in the tunnels. Luckily for Drizzt and the
svirfneblin miners, the spirit-wraith had been far away when he caught the scent.
Zaknafein worked his way back through the tunnels, dodging deep gnome
patrols. Every potential encounter he avoided proved a struggle for Zaknafein, for
Matron Malice, back on her throne in Menzoberranzan, grew increasingly
impatient and agitated.
Malice wanted the taste of blood, but Zaknafein kept to his purpose, closing in on
Drizzt. But then, suddenly, the scent was gone.
Bruck groaned aloud when another solitary dark elf wandered into his
encampment the next day. No spears were hoisted and no goblins even
attempted to sneak up behind this one.
"We went as we were ordered!" Bruck complained, moving to the front of the
group before he was called upon. The goblin chieftain knew now that his
underlings would point him out anyway.
If the spirit-wraith even understood the goblin's words, he did not show it in any
way. Zaknafein kept walking straight at the goblin chieftain, his swords in his
hands.
"But we-" Bruck began, but the rest of his words came out as gurgles of blood.
Zaknafein tore his sword out of the goblin's throat and rushed at the rest of the
group.
Goblins scattered in all directions. A few, trapped between the crazed drow and
the stone wall, raised crude spears in defense. The spirit-wraith waded through
them, hacking away weapons and limbs with every slice. One goblin poked
through the spinning swords, the tip of its spear burying deep into Zaknafein's
hip.
The undead monster didn't even flinch. Zak turned on the goblin and struck it with
a series of lightning-fast, perfectly aimed blows that took its head and both of its
arms from its body.
In the end, fifteen goblins lay dead in the chamber and the tribe was scattered
and still running down every passage in the region. The spirit-wraith, covered in
the blood of his enemies, exited the chamber through the passage opposite from
the one in which he had entered, continuing his frustrated search for the elusive
Drizzt Do'Urden.
Back in Menzoberranzan, in the anteroom to the chapel of House Do'Urden,
Matron Malice rested, thoroughly exhausted and momentarily sated. She had felt
every kill as
Zaknafein made it, had felt a burst of ecstacy every time her spirit-wraith's sword
had plunged into another victim.
Malice pushed away her frustrations and her impatience, her confidence
renewed by the pleasures of Zaknafein's cruel slaughter. How great Malice's
ecstacy would be when the spirit-wraith at last encountered her traitorous son!
CHAPTER 11
THE INFORMANT
Councilor Firble of Blingdenstone moved tentatively into the small rough-hewn
cavern, the appointed meeting place. An army of svirfnebli, including several
deep gnome enchanters holding stones that could summon earth elemental
allies, moved into defensive positions all along the corridors to the west of the
room. Despite this, Firble was not at ease. He looked down the eastern tunnel,
the only other entrance into the chamber, wondering what information his agent
would have for him and worrying over how much it would cost.
Then the drow made his swaggering entrance, his high black boots kicking loudly
on the stone. His gaze darted about quickly to ensure that Firble was the only
svirfneblin in the chamber-their usual deal-then strode up to the deep gnome
councilor and dropped into a low bow.
"Greetings, little friend with the big purse,' the drow said with a laugh. His
command of the svirfneblin language and dialect, with the perfect inflections and
pauses of a deep gnome who had lived a century in Blingdenstone, always
amazed Firble.
"You could exercise some caution,' Firble retorted, again glancing around
anxiously.
"Bah,' the drow snorted, clicking the hard heels of his boots together. "You have
an army of deep gnome fighters and wizards behind you, and I . . . well, let us
just agree that I am well protected as well:
"That fact I do not doubt, Jarlaxle,' Firble replied. "Still, I would prefer that our
business remain as private and as secretive as possible:'
"All of the business of Bregan D'aerthe is private, my dear Firble:' Jarlaxle
answered, and again he bowed low, sweeping his wide-brimmed hat in a long
and graceful arc.
"Enough of that:' said Firble. "Let us be done with our business, so that I may
return to my home:'
"Then ask:' said Jarlaxle.
"There has been an increase in drow activity near Blingdenstone:' explained the
deep gnome.
"Has there?" Jarlaxle asked, appearing surprised. The drow's smirk revealed his
true emotions, though. This would be an easy profit for Jarlaxle, for the very
same matron mother in Menzoberranzan who had recently employed him was
undoubtedly connected with the Blingdenstone's distress. Jarlaxle liked
coincidences that made the profits come easy.
Firble knew the ploy of feigned surprise all too well. "There has:' he said firmly.
"And you wish to know why?" Jarlaxle reasoned, still holding a facade of
ignorance.
"It would seem prudent, from our vantage point:' huffed the councilor, tired of
Jarlaxle's unending game. Firble knew without any doubts that Jarlaxle was
aware of the drow activity near Blingdenstone, and of the purpose behind it.
Jarlaxle was a rogue without house, normally an unhealthy position in the world
of the dark elves. Yet this resourceful mercenary survived-even thrived-in his
renegade position. Through it all, Jarlaxle's greatest advantage was knowledgeknowledge
of every stirring within Menzoberranzan and the regions surrounding
the city.
"How long will you require?" Firble asked. "My king wishes to complete this
business as swiftly as possible:'
"Have you my payment?" the drow asked, holding out a hand.
"Payment when you bring me the information:' Firble protested. "That has always
been our agreement:'
"So it has:' agreed Jarlaxle. "This time, though, I need no time to gather your
information. If you have my gems, we can be done with our business right now:'
Firble pulled the pouch of gems from his belt and tossed them to the drow. "Fifty
agates, finely cut,' he said with a growl, never pleased by the price. He had
hoped to avoid using Jarlaxle this time, like any deep gnome, Firble did not easily
part with such sums.
Jarlaxle quickly glanced into the pouch, then dropped it into a deep pocket. "Rest
easy, little deep gnome,' he began, "for the powers who rule Menzoberranzan
plan no actions against your city. A single drow house has an interest in the
region, nothing more:'
"Why?" Firble asked after a long moment of silence had passed. The svirfneblin
hated having to ask, knowing the inevitable consequence. Jarlaxle held out his
hand. The more finely cut agates passed over.
"The house searches for one of its own,' Jarlaxle explained. "A renegade whose
actions have put his family out of the favor of the Spider Queen:'
Again a few interminable moments of silence passed. Firble could guess easily
enough the identity of this hunted drow, but King Schnicktick would roar until the
ceiling fell in if he didn't make certain. He pulled ten more gemstones from his
belt pouch. "Name the house,' he said.
"Daermon N'a'shezbaernon,' replied Jarlaxle, casually dropping the gems into his
deep pocket. Firble crossed his arms over his chest and scowled. The
unscrupulous drow had caught him once again.
"Not the ancestral name!" the councilor growled, grudgingly pulling out another
ten gems.
"Really, Firble,' Jarlaxle teased. "You must learn to be more specific in your
questioning. Such errors do cost you so much!"
"Name the house in terms that I might understand,' Firble instructed. "And name
the hunted renegade. No more will I pay you this day, Jarlaxle:'
Jarlaxle held his hand up and smiled to silence the deep gnome. "Agreed,' he
laughed, more than satisfied with his take. "House Do'Urden, Eighth House of
Menzoberranzan searches for its secondboy:' The mercenary noted a hint of
recognition in Firble's expression. Might this little meeting provide Jarlaxle with
information that he could turn into further profit at the coffers of Matron Malice?
"Drizzt is his name,' the drow continued, carefully studying the svirfneblin's
reaction. Slyly, he added, "Information of his whereabouts would bring a high
profit in Menzoberranzan:'
Firble stared at the brash drow for a long time. Had he given away too much
when the renegade's identity had been revealed? If Jarlaxle had guessed that
Drizzt was in the deep gnome city, the implications could be grim. Now Firble
was in a predicament. Should he admit his mistake and try to correct it? But how
much would it cost Firble to buy Jarlaxle's promise of silence? And no matter how
great the payment, could Firble really trust the unscrupulous mercenary?
"Our business is at its end,' Firble announced, deciding to trust that Jarlaxle had
not guessed enough to bargain with House Do'Urden. The councilor turned on
his heel and started out of the chamber.
Jarlaxle secretly applauded Firble's decision. He had always believed the
svirfneblin councilor a worthy bargaining adversary and was not now
disappointed. Firble had revealed little information, too little to take to Matron
Malice, and if the deep gnome had more to give, his decision to abruptly end the
meeting was a wise one. In spite of their racial differences, Jarlaxle had to admit
that he actually liked Firble. "Little gnome,' he called out after the departing
figure. "I offer you a warning:'
Firble spun back, his hand defensively covering his closed gem pouch.
"Free of charge,' Jarlaxle said with a laugh and a shake of his bald head. But
then the mercenary's visage turned suddenly serious, even grim. "If you know of
Drizzt Do'Urden,' Jarlaxle continued, "keep him far away. Lloth herself has
charged Matron Malice Do'Urden with Drizzt's death, and Malice will do whatever
she must to accomplish the task. And even if Malice fails, others will take up the
hunt, knowing that the Do'Urden's death will bring great pleasure to the Spider
Queen. He is doomed, Firble, and so doomed will be any foolish enough to stand
beside him:'
"An unnecessary warning:' Firble replied, trying to keep his expression
calm. "For none in Blingdenstone know or care anything for this renegade dark
elf. Nor, I assure you, do any in Blingdenstone hold any desire to find the favor of
the dark elves' Spider Queen deity!"
Jarlaxle smiled knowingly at the svirfneblin's bluff. "Of course:' he replied, and he
swept off his grand hat, dropping into yet another bow.
Firble paused a moment to consider the words and the bow, wondering again if
he should try to buy the mercenary's silence.
Before he came to any decision, though, Jarlaxle was gone, clomping his hard
boots loudly with every departing step. Poor Firble was left to wonder.
He needn't have. Jarlaxle did indeed like little Firble, the mercenary admitted to
himself as he departed, and he would not divulge his suspicions of Drizzt's
whereabouts to Matron Malice.
Unless, of course, the offer was simply too tempting. Firble just stood and
watched the empty chamber for many minutes, wondering and worrying.
For Drizzt, the days had been filled with friendship and fun. He was somewhat of
a hero with the svirfneblin miners who had gone out into the tunnels beside him,
and the story of his clever deception against the goblin tribe grew with every
telling. Drizzt and Belwar went out often, now, and whenever they entered a
tavern or meeting house, they were greeted by cheers and offers of free food and
drink. Both the friends were glad for the other, for together they had found their
place and their peace. Already Burrow-Warden Brickers and Belwar were busily
planning another mining expedition. Their biggest task was narrowing the list of
volunteers, for svirfnebli from every corner of the city had contacted them, eager
to travel beside the dark elf and the most honored burrow-warden.
When a loud and insistent knock came one morning on Belwar's door, both Drizzt
and the deep gnome figured it to be more recruits looking for a place in the
expedition. They were indeed surprised to find the city guard waiting for them,
bidding Drizzt, at the point of a dozen spears, to go with them to an audience
with the king.
Belwar appeared unconcerned. .. A precaution,' he assured Drizzt, pushing away
his breakfast plate of mushrooms and moss sauce. Belwar went to the wall to
grab his cloak, and if Drizzt, concentrating on the spears, had noticed Belwar's
jerking and unsure movements, the drow most certainly would not have been
assured.
The journey through the deep gnome city was quick indeed, with the anxious
guards prodding the drow and the burrow-warden along. Belwar continued to
brush the whole thing off as a "precaution" with every step, and in truth, Belwar
did a fine job keeping a measure of calm in his round-toned voice. But Drizzt
carried no illusions with him into the king's chambers. All of his life had been filled
with crashing ends to promising beginnings.
King Schnicktick sat uncomfortably on his stone throne, his councilors standing
equally ill at ease around him. He did not like this duty that had been placed upon
his shoulders-the svirfnebli considered themselves loyal friends- but in light of
councilor Firble's revelations, the threat to Blingdenstone could not be ignored.
Especially not for the likes of a dark elf.
Drizzt and Belwar moved to stand before the king, Drizzt curious, though ready to
accept whatever might come of this, but Belwar on the edge of anger.
"My thanks in your prompt arrival,' King Schnicktick greeted them, and he cleared
his throat and looked around to his councilors for support. "Spears do keep one
in motion,' Belwar snarled sarcastically.
The svirfneblin king cleared his throat again, noticeably uncomfortable, and
shifted in his seat. "My guard does get a bit excited,' he apologized. "Please take
no offense:'
"None taken,' Drizzt assured him.
"Your time in our city you have enjoyed?" Schnicktick asked, managing a bit of a
smile. Drizzt nodded. "Your people have been gracious beyond anything I could
have asked for or expected,' he replied.
"And you have proven yourself a worthy friend, Drizzt Do'Urden,' Schnicktick
said. "Really our lives have been enriched by your presence:'
Drizzt bowed low, full of gratitude for the svirfneblin king's kind words. But Belwar
narrowed his dark gray eyes and crinkled his hooked nose, beginning to
understand what the king was leading up to.
"Unfortunately,' King Schnicktick began, looking around pleadingly to his
councilors, and not directly at Drizzt, "a situation has come upon us . . :'
"Magga cammara!" shouted Belwar, startling everyone in attendance. "No!" King
Schnicktick and Drizzt looked at the burrow-warden in disbelief.
"You mean to put him out,' Belwar snarled accusingly at Schnicktick.
"Belwar!" Drizzt began to protest.
"Most Honored Burrow-Warden,' the svirfneblin king said sternly. "It is not your
place to interrupt. If again you do so, I will be forced to have you removed from
this chamber:'
"It is true then,' Belwar groaned softly. He looked away.
Drizzt glanced from the king to Belwar and back again, confused as to the
purpose behind this whole encounter.
"You have heard of the suspected drow activity in the tunnels near our eastern
borders?" the king asked Drizzt. Drizzt nodded.
"We have learned the purpose of this activity,' Schnicktick explained. The pause
as the svirfneblin king looked yet another time to his councilors sent shivers
through Drizzt's spine. He knew beyond any doubts what was coming next, but
the words wounded him deeply anyway. "You, Drizzt Do'Urden, are that
purpose:'
"My mother searches for me,' Drizzt replied flatly.
"But she will not find you!" Belwar snarled in defiance aimed at both Schnicktick
and this unknown mother of his new friend. "Not while you remain a guest of the
deep gnomes of Blingdenstone!"
"Belwar, hold!" King Schnicktick scolded. He looked back to Drizzt and his visage
softened. "Please, friend Drizzt, you must understand. I cannot risk war with
Menzoberranzan:'
"I do understand,' Drizzt assured him with sincerity. "I will gather my things:'
"No!" Belwar protested. He rushed up to the throne. "We are svirfnebli. We do not
put out friends in the face of any danger!" The burrow-warden ran from councilor
to councilor, pleading for justice. "Only friendship has Drizzt Do'Urden shown us,
and we would put him out! Magga cammara! If our loyalties are so fragile, are we
any better than the drow of Menzoberranzan?"
"Enough, Most Honored Burrow-Warden!" King Schnicktick cried out in a tone of
finality that even stubborn Belwar could not ignore. "Our decision did not come
easily to us, but it is final! I will not put Blingdenstone in jeopardy for the sake of a
dark elf, no matter that he has shown himself to be a friend?' Schnicktick looked
to Drizzt. "I am truly sorry.'
"Do not be,' Drizzt replied. "You do only as you must, as I did on that long-ago
day when I chose to forsake my people. That decision I made alone, and I have
never asked any for approval or aid. You, good svirfneblin king, and your people
have given me back so much that I had lost. Believe that I have no desire to
invoke the wrath of Menzoberranzan against Blingdenstone. I would never
forgive myself if I played any part in that tragedy. I will be gone from your fair city
within the hour. And in parting I offer only gratitude.'
The svirfneblin king was touched by the words, but his position remained
unbending. He motioned for his guardsmen to accompany Drizzt, who accepted
the armed escort with a resigned sigh. He looked once to Belwar, standing
helplessly beside the svirfneblin councilors, then left the king's halls.
A hundred deep gnomes, particularly Burrow-Warden Krieger and the other
miners of the single expedition Drizzt had accompanied, said their farewells to
the drow as he walked out of Blingdenstone's huge doors. Conspicuously absent
was Belwar Dissengulp, Drizzt had not seen the burrow-warden at all in the hour
since he had left the throne room. Still, Drizzt was grateful for the send-off these
svirfnebli gave him. Their kind words comforted him and gave him the strength
that he knew he would need in the trials of the coming years. Of all the memories
Drizzt would take out of Blingdenstone, he vowed to hold onto those parting
words.
Still, when Drizzt moved away from the gathering, across the small platform and
down the wide staircase, he heard only the resounding echoes of the enormous
doors slamming shut behind him. Drizzt trembled as he looked down the tunnels
of the wild Underdark, wondering how he could possibly survive the trials this
time. Blingdenstone had been his salvation from the hunter, how long would it
take that darker side to rear up again and steal his identity?
But what choice did Drizzt have? Leaving Menzoberranzan had been his
decision, the right decision. Now, though, knowing better the consequences of
his choice, Drizzt wondered about his resolve. Given the opportunity to do it all
over again, would he now find the strength to walk away from his life among his
people?
He hoped that he would.
A shuffle off to the side brought Drizzt alert. He crouched and drew his scimitars,
thinking that Matron Malice had agents waiting for him who had expected him to
be expelled from Blingdenstone. A shadow moved a moment later, but it was no
drow assassin that came in at Drizzt. "Belwar!" he cried in relief. "I feared that
you would not say farewell:'
"And so I will not,' replied the svirfneblin. Drizzt studied the burrow-warden,
noticing the full pack that Belwar wore. "No, Belwar, I cannot allow-"
"I do not remember asking for your permission,' the deep gnome interrupted. "I
have been looking for some excitement in my life. Thought I might venture out
and see what the wide world has to offer:'
"It is not as grand as you expect,' Drizzt replied grimly. "You have your people,
Belwar. They accept you and care for you. That is a greater gift than anything
you can imagine:'
Agreed,' replied the burrow-warden. "And you, Drizzt Do'Urden, have your friend,
who accepts you and cares for you. And stands beside you. Now, are we going
to be on with this adventure, or are we going to stand here and wait for that
wicked mother of yours to walk up and cut us down?"
"You cannot begin to imagine the dangers,' Drizzt warned, but Belwar could see
that the drow's resolve was already starting to wear away.
Belwar banged his mithril hands together. " And you, dark elf cannot begin to
imagine the ways I can deal with such dangers! I am not letting you walk off
alone into the wilds. Understand that as fact-magga cammara-and we can get on
with things:'
Drizzt shrugged helplessly, looked once more to the stubborn determination
stamped openly on Belwar's face, and started off down the tunnel, the deep
gnome falling into step at his side. This time, at least, Drizzt had a companion he
could talk to, a weapon against the intrusions of the hunter. He put his hand in
his pocket and fingered the Guenhwyvar's onyx figurine. Perhaps, Drizzt dared to
hope, the three of them would have a chance to find more than simple survival in
the Underdark.
For a long time afterward, Drizzt wondered if he had acted selfishly in giving in so
easily to Belwar. Whatever guilt he felt, however, could not begin to compare with
the profound sense of relief Drizzt knew whenever he looked down at his side, to
the most honored burrow-warden's bald, bobbing head.
PART 3
Friends And Foes
To live or to survive? Until my second time out in the wilds of the Underdark after
my stay in Blingdenstone, I never would have understood the significance of
such a simple question.
When first I left Menzoberranzan, I thought survival enough, I thought that I could
fall within myself, within my principles, and be satisfied that I had followed the
only course open to me. The alternative was the grim reality of Menzoberranzan
and compliance with the wicked ways that guided my people. If that was life, I
believed, simply surviving would be far preferable.
And yet, that "simple survival" nearly killed me. Worse, it nearly stole everything
that I held dear: The svirfnebli of Blingdenstone showed me a different way.
Svirfneblin society, structured and nurtured on communal values and unity,
proved to be everything that I had always hoped Menzoberranzan would be. The
svirfnebli did much more than merely survive. They lived and laughed and
worked, and the gains they made were shared by the whole, as was the pain of
the losses they inevitably It suffered in the hostile subsurface world.
Joy multiplies when it is shared among friends, but grief diminishes with every
division. That is life.
And so, when I walked back out of Blingdenstone, back into the empty
Underdark's lonely chambers, I walked with hope. At my side went Belwar, my
new friend, and in my pocket went the magical figurine that could summon
Guenhwyvar, my proven friend. In my brief stay with the deep gnomes, I had
witnessed life as I always had hoped it would be-I could not return to simply
surviving.
With my friends beside me, I dared to believe that I would not have to.
-Drizzt Do'Urden
CHAPTER 12
Wilds, Wilds, Wilds
"Did you set it?" Drizzt asked Belwar when the burrow-warden returned to his
side in the winding passage.
"The fire pit is cut,' Belwar replied, tapping his mithril hands triumphantly-but not
too loudly-together. "And I rumpled the extra bedroll off in a corner. Scraped my
boots all over the stone and put your neck-purse in a place where it will be easily
found. I even left a few silver coins under the blanket -I figure I'll not be needing
them anytime soon, anyway:' Belwar managed a chuckle, but despite the
disclaimer, Drizzt could see that the svirfneblin did not so easily part with
valuables.
"A fine deception,' Drizzt offered, to take away the sting of the cost.
"And what of you, dark elf?" Belwar asked. "Have you seen or heard anything?"
"Nothing,' Drizzt replied. He pointed down a side corridor. "I sent Guenhwyvar
away on a wide circuit. If anyone is near, we will soon know:'
Belwar nodded. "Good plan,' he remarked. "Setting the false camp this far from
Blingdenstone should keep your troublesome mother from my kinfolk:'
"And perhaps it will lead my family to believe that I am still in the region and plan
to remain,' Drizzt added hopefully. "Have you given any thought to our
destination?"
"One way is as good as another,' remarked Belwar, hoisting his hands out wide.
"No cities are there, beyond our own, anywhere close. None to my knowledge, at
least:'
"West, then,' offered Drizzt. "Around Blingdenstone and off into the wilds, straight
away from Menzoberranzan:'
"A wise course, it would seem,' agreed the burrow-warden. Belwar closed his
eyes and attuned his thoughts to the emanations of the stone. Like many
Underdark races, deep gnomes possessed the ability to recognize magnetic
variations in the rock, an ability that allowed them to judge direction as accurately
as a surface dweller might follow the sun's trail. A moment later, Belwar nodded
and pointed down the appropriate tunnel.
"West,' Belwar said. And quickly. The more distance you put between yourself
and that mother of yours, the safer we all shall be:' He paused to consider Drizzt
for a long moment, wondering if he might be prodding his new friend a bit too
deeply with his next question.
"What is it?" Drizzt asked him, recognizing his apprehension.
Belwar decided to risk it, to see just how close he and Drizzt had become. "When
first you learned that you were the reason for the drow activity in the eastern
tunnels,' the deep gnome began bluntly, "you seemed a bit weak in the knees, if
you understand me. They are your family, dark elf. Are they so terrible?"
Drizzt's chuckle put Belwar at ease, told the deep gnome that he had not pressed
too far. "Come,' Drizzt said, seeing Guenhwyvar return from the scouting trek. "If
the deception of the camp is complete, then let us take our first steps into our
new life. Our road should be long enough for tales of my home and family:'
"Hold,' said Belwar. He reached into his pouch and produced a small coffer. "A
gift from King Schnicktick,' he explained as he lifted the lid and removed a
glowing brooch, its quiet illumination bathing the area around them.
Drizzt stared at the burrow-warden in disbelief. "It will mark you as a fine target,'
the drow remarked.
Belwar corrected him. "It will mark us as fine targets,' he said with a sly snort.
"But fear not, dark elf, the light will keep more enemies at bay than it will bring. I
am not so fond of tripping on crags and chips in the floor"
"How long will it glow?" Drizzt asked, and Belwar gathered from his tone that the
drow hoped it would fade soon.
"Forever is the dweomer,' Belwar replied with a wide smirk. "Unless some priest
or wizard counters it. Stop your worrying. What creatures of the Underdark would
willingly walk into an illuminated area?"
Drizzt shrugged and trusted in the experienced burrow-warden's judgment. "Very
well,' he said, shaking his white mane helplessly. "Then off for the road:'
"The road and the tales,' replied Belwar, falling into step beside Drizzt, his stout
little legs rolling along to keep up with the drow's long and graceful strides.
They walked for many hours, stopped for a meal, then walked for many more.
Sometimes Belwar used his illuminating brooch, other times the friends walked in
darkness, depending on whether or not they perceived danger in the area.
Guenhwyvar was frequently about yet rarely seen, the panther eagerly taking up
its appointed duties as a perimeter guard.
For a week straight, the companions stopped only when weariness or hunger
forced a break in the march, for they were anxious to be as far from
Blingdenstone-and from those hunting Drizzt-as possible. Still, another full week
would pass before the companions moved out into tunnels that Belwar did not
know. The deep gnome had been a burrow-warden for almost fifty years, and he
had led many of Blingdenstone's farthest-reaching mining expeditions.
"This place is known to me,' Belwar often remarked when they entered a cavern.
"Took a wagon of iron,' he would say, or mithril, or a multitude of other precious
minerals that Drizzt had never even heard of. And, though the burrow-warden's
extended tales of those mining expeditions all ran in basically the same directionhow
many ways can a deep gnome chop stone? Drizzt always listened intently,
savoring every word.
He knew the alternative.
For his part in the storytelling, Drizzt recounted his adventures in
Menzoberranzan's Academy and his many fond memories of Zaknafein and the
training gym. He showed Belwar the double-thrust low and how the pupil had
discovered a parry to counter the attack, to his mentor's surprise and pain. Drizzt
displayed the intricate hand and facial combinations of the silent drow code, and
he briefly entertained the notion of teaching the language to Belwar. The deep
gnome promptly burst into loud and rolling laughter. His dark eyes looked
incredulously at Drizzt, and he led the drow's gaze down to the ends of his arms.
With a hammer and pickaxe for hands, the svirfneblin could hardly muster
enough gestures to make the effort worthwhile. Still, Belwar appreciated that
Drizzt had offered to teach him the silent code. The absurdity of it all gave them
both a fine laugh.
Guenhwyvar and the deep gnome also became friends during those first couple
of weeks on the trail. Often, Belwar would fall into a deep slumber only to be
awakened by prickling in his legs, fast asleep under the weight of six hundred
pounds of panther. Belwar always grumbled and swatted Guenhwyvar on the
rump with his hammer-hand-it became a game between the two-but Belwar truly
didn't mind the panther being so close. In fact, Guenhwyvar's mere presence
made sleep-which always left one so vulnerable in the wilds- much easier to
come by.
"Do you understand?" Drizzt whispered to Guenhwyvar one day. Off to the side,
Belwar was fast asleep, flat on his back on the stone, using a rock for a pillow.
Drizzt shook his head in continued amazement when he studied the little figure.
He was beginning to suspect that the deep gnomes carried their affinity with the
earth a bit too far.
"Go get him,' he prompted the cat.
Guenhwyvar lumbered over and plopped across the burrow-warden's legs. Drizzt
moved away into the shielding entrance of a tunnel to watch.
Only a few minutes later, Belwar awoke with a snarl. "Magga cammara, panther!"
the deep gnome growled. "Why must you always bed down on me, instead of
beside me?" Guenhwyvar shifted slightly but let out only a deep sigh in response.
"Magga cammara, cat!" Belwar roared again. He wiggled his toes frantically,
trying futilely to keep the circulation going and dismiss the tingles that had
already begun. "Away with you!" The burrow-warden propped himself up on one
elbow and swung his hammer hand at Guenhwyvar's backside.
Guenhwyvar sprang away in feigned flight, quicker than Belwar's swat. But just
as the burrow-warden relaxed, the panther cut back on its tracks, pivoted
completely, and leaped atop Belwar, burying him and pinning him flat to the
stone.
After a few moments of struggling, Belwar managed to get his face out from
under Guenhwyvar's muscled chest.
"Get yourself off me or suffer the consequences!" the deep gnome growled,
obviously an empty threat. Guenhwyvar shifted, getting a bit more comfortable in
its perch.
"Dark elf!" Belwar called as loudly as he dared. "Dark elf, take your panther
away. Dark elf!"
"Greetings,' Drizzt answered, walking in from the tunnel as though he had only
just arrived. "Are you two playing again? I had thought my time as sentry near to
its end:'
"Your time has passed,' replied Belwar, but the svirfneblin's words were muffled
by thick black fur as Guenhwyvar shifted again. Drizzt could see Belwar's long,
hooked nose, though, crinkle up in irritation.
"Oh, no, no,' said Drizzt. "I am not so tired. I would not think of interrupting your
game. I know that you both enjoy it so:' He walked by, giving Guenhwyvar a
complimentary pat on the head and a sly wink as he passed.
"Dark elf!" Belwar grumbled at his back as Drizzt departed. But the drow kept
going, and Guenhwyvar, with Drizzt's blessings, soon fell fast asleep.
Drizzt crouched low and held very still, letting his eyes go through the dramatic
shift from infravision- viewing the heat of objects in the infrared spectrum-to
normal vision in the realm of light. Even before the transformation was
completed, Drizzt could tell that his guess had been correct. Ahead, beyond a
low natural archway, came a red glow. The drow held his position, deciding to let
Belwar catch up to him before he went to investigate. Only a moment later, the
dimmer glow of the deep gnome's enchanted brooch came into view.
"Put out the light,' Drizzt whispered, and the brooch's glow disappeared.
Belwar crept along the tunnel to join his companion. He, too, saw the red glow
beyond the archway and understood Drizzt's caution. "Can you bring the
panther?" the burrow-warden asked quietly.
Drizzt shook his head. "The magic is limited by spans of time. Walking the
material plane tires Guenhwyvar. The panther needs to rest:'
"Back the way we came, we could go,' Belwar suggested. "Perhaps there is
another tunnel around:'
"Five miles,' replied Drizzt, considering the length of the unbroken passageway
behind them. "Too long:'
"Then let us see what is ahead,' the burrow-warden reasoned, and he started
boldly off. Drizzt liked Belwar's straightforward attitude and quickly joined him.
Beyond the archway, which Drizzt had to crouch nearly double to get under, they
found a wide and high cavern, its floor and walls covered in a mosslike growth
that emitted the red light. Drizzt pulled up short, at a loss, but Belwar recognized
the stuff well enough.
"Baruchies!" the burrow-warden blurted, the word turning into a chuckle. He
turned to Drizzt and, not seeing any reaction to his smile, explained. "Crimson
spitters, dark elf.
Not for decades have I seen such a patch of the stuff. Quite a rare sight they are,
you know:'
Drizzt, still at a loss, shook the tenseness out of his muscles and shrugged, then
started forward. Belwar's pick-hand hooked him under the arm, and the powerful
deep gnome spun him back abruptly.
"Crimson spitters,' the burrow-warden said again, pointedly emphasizing the
latter of the words. " Magga cammara, dark elf, how did you get along through
the years?"
Belwar turned to the side and slammed his hammer-hand into the wall of the
archway, taking off a fair-sized chunk of stone. He scooped this up in the flat of
his pick-hand and flipped it off to the side of the cavern. The stone hit the redglowing
fungus with a soft thud, then a burst of smoke and spores blasted into
the air.
"Spit,' explained Belwar, "and choke you to death will the spore! If you plan to
cross here, walk lightly, my brave, foolish friend:'
Drizzt scratched his unkempt white locks and considered the predicament. He
had no desire to return the five miles down the tunnel, but neither did he plan to
go plodding through this field of red death. He stood tall just inside the archway
and looked around for some solution. Several stones, a possible walkway, rose
up out of the baruchies, and beyond them lay a trail of clear stone about ten feet
wide running perpendicular to the archway across the chasm.
"We can make it through,' he told Belwar. "There is a clear path:'
"There always is in a field of baruchies,' the burrow-warden replied under his
breath. Drizzt's keen ears caught the comment. "What do you mean?" he asked,
springing agilely out to the first of the raised stones.
"A grubber is about,' the deep gnome explained. "Or has been:'
"A grubber?" Drizzt prudently hopped back to stand beside the burrow-warden.
"Big caterpillar,' Belwar explained. "Grubbers love baruchies. They are the only
things the crimson spitters do not seem to bother:'
"How big?"
"How wide was the clear path?" Belwar asked him.
"Ten feet, perhaps,' Drizzt answered, hopping back out to the first stepping stone
to view it again. Belwar considered the answer for a moment. "One pass for a big
grubber, two for most:' Drizzt hopped back to the side of the burrow-warden
again, giving a cautious look over his shoulder. "Big caterpillar:' he remarked.
"But with a little mouth:' Belwar explained. "Grubbers eat only moss and moldsand
baruchies, if they can find them. Peaceful enough creatures, all in all:'
For the third time, Drizzt sprang out to the stone. "Is there anything else I should
know before I continue?" he asked in exasperation.
Belwar shook his head.
Drizzt led the way across the stones, and soon the two companions stood in the
middle of the ten-foot path. It traversed the cavern and ended with the entrance
to a passage on either side. Drizzt pointed both ways, wondering which direction
Belwar would prefer.
The deep gnome started to the left, then stopped abruptly and peered ahead.
Drizzt understood Belwar's hesitation, for he, too, felt the vibrations in the stone
under his feet.
"Grubber:' said Belwar. "Stand quiet and watch, my friend. They are quite a
sight:'
Drizzt smiled wide and crouched low, eager for the entertainment. When he
heard a quick shuffle behind him, though, Drizzt began to suspect that something
was out of sorts.
"Where. . ' Drizzt began to ask when he turned about and saw Belwar in full flight
toward the other exit.
Drizzt stopped speaking abruptly when an explosion like the crash of a cave-in
erupted from the other way, the way he had been watching.
"Quite a sight!" he heard Belwar call, and he couldn't deny the truth of the deep
gnome's words when the grubber made its appearance. It was huge-bigger than
the basilisk Drizzt had killed-and looked like a gigantic pale gray worm, except for
the multitude of little feet pumping along beside its massive torso. Drizzt saw that
Belwar had not lied, for the thing had no mouth to speak of, and no talons or
other apparent weapons. But the giant was coming straight at Drizzt with a
vengeance now, and Drizzt couldn't get the image of a flattened dark elf,
stretched from one end of the cavern to the other, out of his mind. He reached for
his scimitars, then realized the absurdity of that plan. Where would he hit the
thing to slow it? Throwing his hands helplessly out wide, Drizzt spun on his heel
and fled after the departing burrow-warden.
The ground shook under Drizzt's feet so violently that he wondered if he might
topple to the side and be blasted by the baruchies. But then the tunnel entrance
was just ahead and Drizzt could see a smaller side passage, too small for the
grubber, just outside the baruchie cavern. He darted ahead the last few strides,
then cut swiftly into the small tunnel, diving into a roll to break his momentum.
Still, he ricocheted hard off the wall, then the grubber slammed in behind,
smashing at the tunnel entrance and dropping pieces. of stone all about.
When the dust finally cleared, the grubber remained outside the passage,
humming a low, growling moan and, every so often, banging its head against the
stone. Belwar stood just a few feet farther in than Drizzt, the deep gnome's arms
crossed over his chest and a satisfied grin on his face.
"Peaceful enough?" Drizzt asked him, rising to his feet and shaking off the dust.
"They are indeed:' replied Belwar with a nod. "But grubbers do love their
baruchies and have no mind to share the things!"
"You almost got me crushed!" Drizzt snarled at him.
Again Belwar nodded. "Mark it well, dark elf, for the next time you set your
panther to sleep on me, I will surely do worse!"
Drizzt fought hard to hide his smile. His heart still pumped wildly under the
influence of the adrenaline burst, but Drizzt held no anger toward his companion.
He thought back to encounters he had suffered just a few months before, when
he was out alone in the wilds. How different life would be with Belwar Dissengulp
by his side! How much more enjoyable! Drizzt glanced back over his shoulder to
the angry and stubborn grubber.
And how much more interesting!
"Come along,, the smug svirfneblin continued, starting off down the passage.
"We are only making the grubber angrier by loitering in its sight:'
The passageway narrowed and turned a sharp bend just a few feet farther in.
Around the bend, the companions found even more trouble, for the corridor
ended in a blank stone wall. Belwar moved right up to inspect it, and it was
Drizzt's turn to cross his arms over his chest and gloat.
"You have put us in a dangerous spot, little friend:' the drow said. " An angry
grubber behind, trapping us in a box corridor!
Pressing his ear to the stone, Belwar waved Drizzt off with his hammer-hand.
"Merely an inconvenience,' the deep gnome assured him. "There is another
tunnel beyond-not more than seven feet:'
"Seven feet of stone:' Drizzt reminded him.
But Belwar didn't seem concerned. " A day:' he said. "Perhaps two:' Belwar held
his arms out wide and began a chant too low for Drizzt to hear clearly, though the
drow realized that Belwar was engaged in some sort of spellcasting.
"Bivrip!" Belwar cried.
Nothing happened.
The burrow-warden turned back on Drizzt and did not seem disappointed. "A
day.' he proclaimed again.
"What did you do?" Drizzt asked him.
"Set my hands a humming:' replied the deep gnome. Seeing that Drizzt was
completely at a loss, Belwar turned on his heel and slammed his hammer-hand
into the wall. An explosion of sparks brightened the small passage, blinding
Drizzt. By the time the drow's eyes could adjust to the continuing burst of
Belwar's punching and hacking, he saw that his svirfneblin companion already
had ground several inches of rock into fine dust at his feet. "Magga cammara,
dark elf:' Belwar cried with a wink. You did not believe that my people would go to
all the trouble of crafting such fine hands for me without putting a bit of magic into
them, did you?"
Drizzt moved to the side of the passage and sat. "You are full of surprises, little
friend:' he answered with a sigh of surrender.
"I am indeed!" Belwar roared, and he pounded the stone again, sending flecks
flying in every direction.
They were out of the box corridor in a day, as Belwar had promised, and they set
off again, traveling now-by the deep gnome's estimation-generally north. Luck
had followed them so far, and they both knew it, for they had spent two weeks in
the wilds and had encountered nothing more hostile than a grubber protecting its
baruchies.
A few days later, their luck changed.
"Summon the panther:' Belwar bade Drizzt as they crouched in the wide tunnel
they had been traveling. Drizzt did not argue the wisdom of the burrow-warden's
request, he didn't like the green glow ahead any more than Belwar did. A
moment later, the black mist swirled and took shape, and Guenhwyvar stood
beside them.
"I go first:' Drizzt said. "You both follow together, twenty steps behind:' Belwar
nodded and Drizzt turned and started away. Drizzt almost expected the
movement when the svirfneblin's pickaxe-hand hooked him and turned him
about.
"Be careful:' Belwar said. Drizzt only smiled in reply, touched at the sincerity in
his friend's voice and thinking again how much better it was to have a companion
by his side. Then Drizzt dismissed his thoughts and moved away, letting his
instincts and experience guide him.
He found the glow to be emanating from a hole in the corridor floor. Beyond it,
the corridor continued but bent sharply, nearly doubling back on itself. Drizzt fell
to his belly and peered down the hole. Another passage, about ten feet below
him, ran perpendicular to the one he was in, opening a short way ahead into
what appeared to be a large cavern.
"What is it?" Belwar whispered, coming up behind.
"Another corridor to a chamber,' Drizzt replied. "The glow comes from there:' He
lifted his head and looked down into the ensuing darkness of the higher corridor.
"Our tunnel continues,' Drizzt reasoned. "We can go right by it:'
Belwar looked down the passageway they had been traveling, noting the turn.
"Doubles back,' he reasoned. "And probably comes right out at that side passage
we passed an hour ago:' The deep gnome dropped to the dirt and looked into the
hole.
"What would make such a glow?" Drizzt asked him, easily guessing that Belwar's
curiosity was as keen as his own. Another form of moss?"
"None that I know,' Belwar replied.
"Shall we find out?"
Belwar smiled at him, then hooked his pick-hand on the ledge and swung over
and in, dropping down to the lower tunnel. Drizzt and Guenhwyvar followed
silently, the drow, scimitars in hand, again taking the lead as they moved toward
the glow.
They came into a wide and high chamber, its ceiling far beyond their sight and a
lake of green-glowing foul-smelling liquid bubbling and hissing twenty feet below
them. Dozens of interconnected narrow stone walkways, varying from one to ten
feet wide, crisscrossed the gorge, most ending at exits leading into more side
corridors.
"Magga cammara,' whispered the stunned svirfneblin, and Drizzt shared that
thought.
"It appears as though the floor was blasted away,' Drizzt remarked when he
again found his voice.
"Melted away,' replied Belwar, guessing the liquid's nature. He hacked off a
chunk of stone at his side and, tapping Drizzt to get his attention, dropped it into
the green lake. The liquid hissed as if in anger where the rock hit, eating away at
the stone before it even sank from sight.
"Acid,' Belwar explained.
Drizzt looked at him curiously. He knew of acid from his days of training under
the wizards of Sorcere in the Academy. Wizards often concocted such vile liquids
for use their magical experiments, but Drizzt did not figure that acid would appear
naturally, or in such quantities.
"Some wizard's working, I would guess,' said Belwar. "An experiment out of
control. It has probably been here for a hundred years, eating away at the floor,
sinking down inch by inch:'
"But what remains of the floor seems secure enough,' observed Drizzt, pointing
to the walkways. "And we have a score of tunnels to choose from:'
"Then let us begin at once,' said Belwar. "I do not like this place. We are exposed
in the light, and I would not care to take quick flight along such narrow bridgesnot
with a lake of acid below me!"
Drizzt agreed and took a cautious step out on the walkway, but Guenhwyvar
quickly moved past him. Drizzt understood the panther's logic and
wholeheartedly agreed.
"Guenhwyvar will lead us,' he explained to Belwar. "The panther is the heaviest
and quick enough to spring away if a section begins to fall:'
The burrow-warden was not completely satisfied. "What if Guenhwyvar does not
make it to safety?" he asked, truly concerned. "What will the acid do to a magical
creature?"
Drizzt wasn't certain of the answer. "Guenhwyvar should be safe,' he reasoned,
pulling the onyx figurine from his pocket. "I hold the gateway to the panther's
home plane.'
Guenhwyvar was a dozen strides away by then-the walkway seemed sturdy
enough-and Drizzt set out to follow. "Magga cammara, I pray you are right,' he
heard Belwar mumble at his back as he took the first steps out from the ledge.
The chamber was huge, several hundred feet across even to the nearest exit.
The companions neared the halfway point-Guenhwyvar had already passed itwhen
they heard a strange chanting sound. They stopped and glanced about,
searching for the source.
A weird-looking creature stepped out from one of the numerous side passages. It
was bipedal and black skinned, with a beaked bird's head and the torso of a man,
featherless and wingless. Both of its powerful-looking arms ended in hooked,
wicked claws, and its legs ended in three-toed feet. Another creature stepped out
from behind it, and another from behind them.
"Relatives?" Belwar asked Drizzt, for the creatures did indeed resemble some
weird cross between a dark elf and a bird.
"Hardly:' Drizzt replied. "In all of my life, I have never heard of such creatures.'
Doom! Doom!" came the continuing chant, and the friends looked around to see
more of the bird-men stepping out from other passages. They were dire corbies,
an ancient race more common to the southern reaches of the Underdark-though
rare even there-and almost unknown in this part of the world. Corbies had never
been of much concern to any of the Underdark races, for the bird-men's methods
were crude and their numbers were small. For a passing band of adventurers,
however, a flock of savage dire corbies meant trouble indeed.
"Nor have I ever encountered such creatures, Belwar agreed. "But I do not
believe that they are pleased to see us:'
The chant became a series of horrifying shrieks as the corbies began to disperse
out onto the walkways, walking at first, but occasionally breaking into quick trots,
their anxiety obviously increasing.
"You are wrong, my little friend, Drizzt remarked. "I believe that they are quite
pleased to have their dinner delivered to them:'
Belwar looked around helplessly. Nearly all of their escape routes were already
cut off, and they couldn't hope to get out without a fight. "Dark elf, I can think of a
thousand
places I would rather do battle:' the burrow-warden said with a resigned shrug
and- a shudder as he took another look down into the acid lake. 'Taking a deep
breath to calm himself, Belwar began his ritual to enchant his magical hands.
"Move while you chant:' Drizzt instructed him, leading him on. "Let us get as
close to an exit as we can before the fighting begins:'
One group of corbies closed rapidly at the party's side, but Guenhwyvar, with a
mighty spring that spanned two of the walkways, cut the bird-men off.
"Bivrip!" Belwar cried, completing his spell, and he turned toward the impending
battle.
"Guenhwyvar can take care of that group,' Drizzt assured him, quickening his
steps toward the nearest wall. Belwar saw the drow's reasoning, still another
group of enemies had come out of the exit they were making for.
The momentum of Guenhwyvar's leap carried the panther straight into the pack
of corbies, bowling two of them right off the walkway. The bird-men shrieked
horribly as they fell to their deaths, but their remaining companions seemed
unbothered by the loss. Drooling and chanting, "Doom! Doom!" they tore in at
Guenhwyvar with their sharp talons.
The panther had formidable weapons of its own. Each swat of a great claw tore
the life from a corby or sent it tumbling from the walkway to the acid lake. But,
while the cat continued to slash into the bird-men's ranks, the fearless corbies
continued to fight back, and more rushed in eagerly to join. A second group came
from the opposite direction and surrounded Guenhwyvar.
Belwar set himself on a narrow section of the walkway and let the line of corbies
come to him. Drizzt, taking a parallel route along a walkway fifteen feet to his
friend's side, did likewise, drawing his scimitars somewhat reluctantly. The drow
could feel the savage instincts of the hunter welling up within him as the battle
drew near, and he fought back with all of his willpower to sublimate the wild
urges. He was Drizzt Do'Urden, no more the hunter, and he would face his foes
fully in control of his every movement.
Then the corbies were upon him, flailing away, shrieking their frenzied chants.
Drizzt did little more than parry in those first seconds, the flats of his blades
working marvelously to deflect each attempted strike. The scimitars spun and
whirled, but the drow, refusing to loose the killer within him, made little headway
in his fight. After several minutes, he still faced off against the first corby that had
come at him.
Belwar was not so reserved. Corby after corby rushed in at the little svirfneblin,
only to be pounded to a sudden halt by the burrow-warden's explosive hammerhand.
The electrical jolt and the sheer force of the blow often killed the corby
where it stood, but Belwar never waited long enough to find out. Following each
hammer blow, the deep gnome's
pickaxe-hand came across in a roundhouse arc, sweeping the latest victim from
the walkway.
The svirfneblin had dropped a half-dozen of the bird-men before he got the
chance to look over at Drizzt. He recognized at once the inner struggle the drow
was fighting.
Magga cammara!" Belwar screamed. "Fight them, dark elf, and fight to win! They
will show no mercy! There can be no truce! Kill them-cut them down-or surely
they shall kill you!"
Drizzt hardly heard Belwar's words. Tears rimmed his lavender eyes, though
even in that blur, the almost magical rhythm of his weaving blades did not slow.
He caught his opponent off balance and reversed the motion of a thrust,
slamming the bird-man in the head with the pommel of his scimitar. The corby
dropped like a stone and rolled. It would have fallen from the ledge, but Drizzt
stepped across it and held it in place.
Belwar shook his head and belted another adversary. The corby hopped
backward, its chest smoking and charred by the jarring impact of the enchanted
hammer-hand. The corby looked at Belwar in blank disbelief, but uttered not a
sound, nor made any move at all, as the pickaxe hooked in, catching it in the
shoulder and launching it out over the acid lake. Guenhwyvar flustered the
hungry attackers. As the corbies closed in on the panther's back, thinking the kill
at hand, Guenhwyvar crouched and sprang. The panther soared through the
green light as though it had taken flight, landing on yet another of the walkways
fully thirty feet away. Skidding on the smooth stone, Guenhwyvar just managed
to halt before toppling over the ledge into the acid pool.
The corbies glanced around in stunned amazement for just a moment, then took
up their shrieks and wails and set off along the walkways in pursuit.
A single corby, near where Guenhwyvar had landed, ran fearlessly to battle the
cat. Guenhwyvar's teeth found its neck in an instant and squeezed the life from it.
But while the panther was so engaged, the corbies' devilish trap showed another
twist. From far above in the high-ceilinged cavern, a corby at last saw a victim in
position. The bird-man wrapped its arms around the heavy boulder on the ledge
beside it and pushed out, dropping with the stone.
At the last second, Guenhwyvar saw the plummeting monster and scrambled out
of its path. The corby, in its suicidal ecstacy, didn't even care. The bird-man
slammed into the walkway, the momentum of the heavy boulder shattering the
narrow bridge to pieces.
The great panther tried to spring out again, but the stone underneath
Guenhwyvar's feet disintegrated before they could set and spring. Claws
scratching futilely at the crumbling bridge, Guenhwyvar followed the corby and its
boulder down into the acid lake.
Hearing the elated shouts of the bird-men behind him, Belwar spun about just in
time to see Guenhwyvar's fall. Drizzt, too engaged at the time-for another corby
flailed away at him and the one he had dropped was stirring back to
consciousness between his feet-did not see. But the drow did not have to see.
The figurine in Drizzt's pocket heated suddenly, wisps of smoke rising ominously
from Drizzt's piwafwi cloak. Drizzt could guess easily enough what had happened
to his dear Guenhwyvar. The drow's eyes narrowed, their sudden fire melting
away his tears.
He welcomed the hunter.
Corbies fought with fury. The highest honor of their existence was to die in battle.
And those closest to Drizzt Do'Urden soon realized that the moment of their
highest honor was upon them.
The drow thrust both his scimitars straight out, each finding an eye of the corby
facing him. The hunter pulled out the blades, spun them over in his hands, and
plunged them down into the bird-man at his feet. He snapped the scimitars up
immediately and plunged them down again, taking grim satisfaction in the sound
of their smooth cut.
Then the drow dived headlong into the corbies ahead of him, his blades cutting in
from every possible angle hit a dozen times before it ever launched a single
swing, the first corby was quite dead before it even fell. Then the second, then
the third. Drizzt backed them up to a wider section of the walkway. They came at
him three at a time.
They died at his feet three at a time.
"Get them, dark elf,' mumbled Belwar, seeing his friend explode into action. The
corby coming to meet the burrow-warden turned its head to see what had caught
Belwar's attention. When it turned back, it was met squarely in the face by the
deep gnome's hammer-hand. Pieces of beak flew in every direction, and that
unfortunate corby was the first of its species to take flight in several millennium of
evolution. Its short airborne excursion pushed its companions back from the deep
gnome, and the corby landed, dead on its back, many feet from Belwar.
The enraged deep gnome wasn't finished with this one. He raced up, bowling
from the walkway the single corby who managed to get back to intercept him.
When he arrived at last at his beakless victim, Belwar drove his pickaxe-hand
deep into its chest. With that single muscled arm, the burrow-warden hoisted the
dead corby high into the air and let out a horrifying shriek of his own.
The other corbies hesitated. Belwar looked to Drizzt and was dismayed. A score
of corbies crowded in on the wide section of the walkway where the drow made
his stand. Another dozen lay dead at Drizzt feet, their blood running off the ledge
and dripping into the acid lake in rhythmic hissing plops. But it wasn't the odds
that Belwar feared, with his precise movements and measured thrusts, Drizzt
was undeniably winning. High above the drow, though, another suicidal corby
and his pet rock took a dive.
Belwar believed that Drizzt's life had come to a crashing end.
But the hunter sensed the peril.
A corby reached for Drizzt. With a flash of the drow's scimitars, both its arms flew
free of their respective shoulders. In the same dazzling movement, Drizzt
snapped his bloodied scimitars into their sheaths and bolted for the edge of the
platform. He reached the lip and leaped out toward Belwar just as the suicidal
boulder-riding corby crashed down, taking the platform and a score of its kin with
it into the acid pool.
Belwar heaved his beakless trophy into the corbies facing him and dropped to his
knees, reaching out with his pickaxe-hand to try to aid his soaring friend. Drizzt
caught the burrow-warden's hand and the ledge at the same time, slamming his
face into the stone but finding a hold.
The jolt ripped the drow's piwafwi, though, and Belwar watched helplessly as the
onyx figurine rolled out and dropped toward the acid.
Drizzt caught it between his feet.
Belwar nearly laughed aloud at the futility and hopelessness of it all. He looked
over his shoulder to see the corbies resuming their advance.
"Dark elf, surely it has been fun, the svirfneblin said resignedly to Drizzt, but the
drow's response stole the levity from Belwar as surely as it stole the blood from
the deep gnome's face.
"Swing me!" Drizzt growled so powerfully that Belwar obeyed before he even
realized what he was doing. Drizzt rolled out and came swinging back toward the
walkway, and when he bounced into the stone, every muscle in his body jerked
violently to aid his momentum.
He rolled right around the bottom of the walkway, scrambling and clawing with
his arms and legs to gain a footing back up behind the crouching deep gnome.
By the time Belwar realized what Drizzt had done and thought to turn around,
Drizzt had his scimitars out and slicing across the face of the first approaching
corby.
"Hold this,' Drizzt bade his friend, flicking the onyx figurine to Belwar with his toe.
Belwar caught the item between his arms and fumbled it into a pocket. Then the
deep gnome stood back and watched, taking up a rear guard, as Drizzt cut a
devastating path to the nearest exit.
Five minutes later, to Belwar's absolute amazement, they were running free
down a darkened tunnel, the frustrated shrieks of "Doom! Doom!" fast fading
behind them.
CHAPTER 13
A LITTLE PLACE TO CALL HOME
"Enough. Enough!" the winded burrow-warden gasped at Drizzt, trying to slow his
companion. "Magga cammara, dark elf. We have left them far behind:'
Drizzt spun on the burrow-warden, scimitars ready in hand and angry fires
burning still in his lavender eyes. Belwar backed away quickly and cautiously.
"Calm, my friend,' the svirfneblin said quietly, but despite the reassurance, the
burrow-warden's mithril hands came defensively in front of him. "The threat to us
is ended:'
Drizzt breathed deeply to steady himself, then, realizing that he had not put his
scimitars away, promptly slipped them into their sheaths.
"Are you all right?" Belwar asked, moving back to Drizzt's side. Blood smeared
the drow's face from where he had slammed into the side of the walkway.
Drizzt nodded. "It was the fight,' he tried vainly to explain. "The excitement. I had
to let go of-"
"You need not explain,' Belwar cut him short. "You did fine, dark elf. Better than
fine. Had it not been for your actions, we, all three, surely would have fallen:'
"It came back to me,' Drizzt groaned, searching for the words that could explain.
"That darker part of me. I had thought it gone:'
"It is,' the burrow-warden said.
"No.' argued Drizzt. "That cruel beast that I have become possessed me fully
against those bird-men. It guided my blades, savagely and without mercy:'
"You guided your own blades,' Belwar assured him.
"But the rage, replied Drizzt. "The unthinking rage. All I wanted to do was kill
them and hack them down:'
"If that was the truth, we would be there still.' reasoned the svirfneblin. "By your
actions, we escaped. There are many more of the bird-men back there to be
killed, yet you led the way from the chamber. Rage? Perhaps, but surely not
unthinking rage. You did as you had to do, and you did it well, dark elf. Better
than anyone I have ever seen. Do not apologize, to me or to yourself!"
Drizzt leaned back against the wall to consider the words. He was comforted by
the deep gnome's reasoning and appreciated Belwar's efforts. Still, though, the
burning fires of rage he had felt when Guenhwyvar fell into the acid lake haunted
him, an emotion so overwhelming that Drizzt had not yet come to terms with it.
He wondered if he ever would.
In spite of his uneasiness, though, Drizzt felt comforted by the presence of his
svirfneblin friend. He remembered other encounters of the last years, battles he
had been forced to fight alone. Then, like now, the hunter had welled within him,
had come to the fore and guided the deadly strikes of his blades. But there was a
difference this time that Drizzt could not deny. Before, when he was alone, the
hunter did not so readily depart. Now, with Belwar by his side, Drizzt was fully
back in control.
Drizzt shook his thick white mane, trying to dismiss any last remnants of the
hunter. He thought himself foolish now for the way he had begun the battle
against the bird-men, slapping with the flat of his blades. He and Belwar might be
in the cavern still if Drizzt's instinctive side had not emerged, if he had not
learned of Guenhwyvar's fall.
He looked at Belwar suddenly, remembering the inspiration of his anger. "The
statuette!" he cried. "You have it:'
Belwar scooped the item out of his pocket. "Magga cammara!" Belwar exclaimed,
his round-toned voice edged with panic. "Might the panther be wounded? What
effect would the acid have against Guenhwyvar? Might the panther have
escaped to the Astral Plane?"
Drizzt took the figurine and examined it in trembling hands, taking comfort in the
fact that it was not marred in any way. Drizzt believed that he should wait before
calling Guenhwyvar, if the panther was injured, it surely would heal better at rest
in its own plane of existence. But Drizzt could not wait to learn of Guenhwyvar's
fate. He placed the figurine down on the ground at his feet and called out softly.
Both the drow and the svirfneblin sighed audibly when the mist began to swirl
around the onyx statue. Belwar took out his enchanted brooch to better observe
the cat.
A dreadful sight awaited them. Obediently, faithfully, Guenhwyvar came to
Drizzt's summons, but as soon as the drow saw the panther, he knew that he
should have left
Guenhwyvar alone so that it might lick its wounds. Guenhwyvar's silken black
coat was burned and showing more patches of scalded skin than fur. Once-sleek
muscles hung ragged, burned from the bone, and one eye remained closed and
horribly scarred.
Guenhwyvar stumbled, trying to get to Drizzt's side. Drizzt rushed to Guenhwyvar
instead, dropping to his knees and throwing a gentle hug around the panther's
huge neck. "Guen:' he mumbled.
"Will it heal?" Belwar asked softly, his voice nearly breaking apart on every word.
Drizzt shook his head, at a loss. Really, he knew very little about the panther
beyond its abilities as his companion. Drizzt had seen Guenhwyvar wounded
before, but never seriously. Now he could only hope that the magical extraplanar
properties would allow Guenhwyvar to recover fully.
"Go back home:' Drizzt said. "Rest and get well, my friend. I will call for you in a
few days:'
"Perhaps we can give some aid now,' Belwar offered.
Drizzt knew the futility of that suggestion. "Guenhwyvar will better heal at rest:' he
explained as the cat dissipated into the mist again. "We can do nothing for
Guenhwyvar that will carry over to the other plane. Being here in our world taxes
the panther's strength. Every minute takes a toll.'
Guenhwyvar was gone and only the figurine remained. Drizzt picked it up and
studied it for a very long time before he could bear to drop it back into a pocket.
A sword flicked the bedroll up into the air, then slashed and cut beside its sister
blade until the blanket was no more than a tattered rag. Zaknafein glanced down
at the silver coins on the floor. Such an obvious dupe, but the camp, and the
prospect of Drizzt returning to it, had kept Zaknafein at bay for several days!
Drizzt Do'Urden was gone, and he had taken great pains to announce his
departure from Blingdenstone. The spirit-wraith paused to consider this new bit of
information, and the necessity of thought, of tapping into the rational being that
Zaknafein had been on more than an instinctive level, brought the inevitable
conflict between this undead animation and the spirit of the being it held captive.
Back in her anteroom, Matron Malice Do'Urden felt the struggle within her
creation. In Zin-carla, control of the spirit-wraith remained the responsibility of the
matron mother that the Spider Queen graced with the gift. Malice had to work
hard at the appointed task, had to spit off a succession of chants and spells to
insinuate herself between the thought processes of the spirit-wraith and the
emotions and soul of Zaknafein Do'Urden.
The spirit-wraith lurched as he felt the intrusions of Malice's powerful will. It
proved to be no contest, in barely a second, the spirit-wraith was studying the
small chamber Drizzt and one other being, probably a deep gnome, had
disguised as a campsite. They were gone now, weeks out, and no doubt moving
away from Blingdenstone with all speed. Probably, the spirit-wraith reasoned,
moving away from Menzoberranzan as well.
Zaknafein moved outside the chamber into the main tunnel. He sniffed one way,
back east toward Menzoberranzan, then turned and dropped to a crouch and
sniffed again. The location spells Malice had imbued upon Zaknafein could not
cover such distances, but the minute sensations the spirit-wraith received from
his inspection only confirmed his suspicions. Drizzt had gone west.
Zaknafein walked off down the tunnel, not the slightest limp evident from the
wound he had received at the end of a goblin's spear, a wound that would have
crippled a mortal being. He was more than a week behind Drizzt, maybe two, but
the spirit-wraith was not concerned. His prey had to sleep, had to rest and eat.
His prey was flesh, and mortal and weak.
"What manner of being is it?" Drizzt whispered to Belwar as they watched the
curious bipedal creature filling buckets in a fast-running stream. This entire area
of the tunnels was magically lighted, but Drizzt and Belwar felt safe enough in the
shadows of a rocky outcropping a few dozen yards from the stooping robed
figure.
"A man,' Belwar replied. "Human, from the surface.'
"He is a long way from home,' Drizzt remarked. "Yet he seems comfortable in his
surroundings. I would not believe that a surface-dweller could survive in the
Underdark. It goes against the teachings I received in the Academy:'
"Probably a wizard,' Belwar reasoned. "That would account for the light in this
region. And it would account for his being here:'
Drizzt looked at the svirfneblin curiously.
"A strange lot are wizards,' Belwar explained, as though the truth was selfevident.
"Human wizards, even more than any others, so I've heard tell. Drow
wizards practice for power. Svirfneblin wizards practice the arts to better know
the stone. But human wizards, the deep gnome went on, obvious disdain in his
tone. "Magga cammara, dark elf, human wizards are a different lot altogether!"
"Why do human wizards practice the art of magic at all?" Drizzt asked.
Belwar shook his head. "I do not believe that any scholars have yet discovered
the reason,' he replied in all sincerity. "A strange and dangerously unpredictable
race are the humans, and better to be left alone:'
"You have met some?"
"A few:' Belwar shuddered, as though the memory was not a pleasant one.
"Traders from the surface. Ugly things, and arrogant. The whole of the world is
only for them, by their thinking:'
The resonant voice rang out a bit more loudly than Belwar had intended, and the
robed figure by the stream cocked his head in the companions' direction.
"Comen out, leetle rodents,' the human called in a language that the companions
could not understand. The wizard reiterated the request in another tongue, then
in drow, and then in two more unknown tongues, and then in svirfneblin. He
continued on for many minutes, Drizzt and Belwar looking at each other in
disbelief.
"He is a learned man,' Drizzt whispered to the deep gnome.
"Rats, probably,' the human muttered to himself. He glanced around, seeking
some way to flush out the unseen noisemakers, thinking that the creatures might
provide a fine meal.
"Let us learn if he is friend or foe,' Drizzt whispered, and he started to move out
from the concealment. Belwar stopped him and looked at him doubtfully, but
then, with no recourse other than his own instincts, he shrugged and let Drizzt
move on.
"Greetings, human so far from home,' Drizzt said in his native language, stepping
out from behind the outcropping.
The human's eyes went hysterically wide and he pulled roughly on his scraggly
white beard. "You ist notten a rat" he shrieked in strained but understandable
drow.
"No.' Drizzt said. He looked back to Belwar, who was moving out to join him.
"Thieves!" the human cried. "Comen to shteal my home, ist you?"
"No.' Drizzt said again.
"Go avay!" the human yelled, waving his hands as a farmer would to shoo
chickens. "Getten. Go on, qvickly nowl"
Drizzt and Belwar exchanged curious glances.
"No.' Drizzt said a third time.
"Thees ist my home, stupit dark elven!" the human spat.
"Did I asket you to comen here? Did I sent a letter invititing you to join me in my
home? Or perhapst you and your oogiy little friend simply consider it your duty to
velcome me to the neighborhoodl"
"Careful, drow:' Belwar whispered as the human rambled on. "He's a wizard, for
sure, and a shaky one, even by human standards:'
"Oren maybe bot the drow ant deep gnome races fear of me?" the human
mused, more to himself than to the intruders. "Yes, of course. They have heard
that I Brister
Fendlestick, decided to take to the corridors of the Underdark and have joined
forces to protecket themselvens against me! Yes, yes, it all seems so clear, and
so pititiful, to me now!"
"I have fought wizards before,' Drizzt replied to Belwar under his breath. "Let us
hope that we can settle this without blows. Whatever must happen, though, know
that I have no desire to return the way we came:' Belwar nodded his grim
agreement as Drizzt turned back to the human.
"Perhaps we can convince him simply to let us pass,' Drizzt whispered.
The human trembled on the verge of an explosion. "Fine!" he screamed
suddenly. "Then do not getten away!" Drizzt saw his error in thinking that he
might reason with this one. The drow started forward, meaning to close in before
the wizard could launch any attacks.
But the human had learned to survive in the Underdark, and his defenses were in
place long before Drizzt and Belwar ever appeared around the rocky
outcropping. He waved his hands and uttered a single word that the companions
could not understand. A ring on his finger glowed brightly and loosed a tiny ball of
fire up into the air between him and the intruders.
"Velcome to my home, then!" the wizard yelled triumphantly. "Play with this!" He
snapped his fingers and vanished.
Drizzt and Belwar could feel the explosive energy gathering around the glowing
orb.
"Run!" the burrow-warden cried, and he turned to flee. In Blingdenstone, most of
the magic was illusionary, designed for defense. But in Menzoberranzan, where
Drizzt had learned of magic, the spells were undeniably offensive. Drizzt knew
the wizard's attack, and he knew that in these narrow and low corridors, flight
would not be an option.
"No!" he cried, and he grabbed the back of Belwar's leather jack and pulled the
deep gnome along, straight toward the glowing orb. Belwar knew to trust in
Drizzt, and he turned and ran willingly beside his friend. The burrow-warden
understood the drow's plan as soon as his eyes managed to tear away from the
spectacle of the orb. Drizzt was making for the stream.
The friends dived headlong into the water, bouncing and scraping on the stones,
just as the fireball exploded.
A moment later, they rose up from the steaming water, wisps of smoke rising
from the back of their clothing, which had not been submerged. They coughed
and sputtered, for the flames had temporarily stolen the air from the chamber,
and the residual heat from the glowing stones nearly overwhelmed them.
"Humans,' Belwar muttered grimly. He pulled himself from the water and shook
vigorously. Drizzt came out beside him and couldn't hide his laughter. The deep
gnome, though, found no levity at all in the situation. "The wizard,' he pointedly
reminded Drizzt. Drizzt dropped into a crouch and glanced nervously all around.
They set off at once.
"Home!" Belwar proclaimed a couple of days later. The two friends looked down
from a narrow ledge at a wide and high cavern that housed an underground lake.
Behind them was a three-chambered cave with only a single tiny entrance, easily
defensible.
Drizzt climbed the ten or so feet to stand by his friend on the top-most ledge.
"Possibly,' he tentatively agreed, "though we left the wizard only a few days' walk
from here:'
"Forget the human,' Belwar snarled, glancing over at the burn mark on his
precious jack.
"And I am not so fond of having so large a pool only a few feet from our door,'
Drizzt continued.
"With fish it is filled" the burrow-warden argued. " Andwith mosses and plants that
will keep our bellies full, and water that seems clean enough!"
"But such an oasis will attract visitors,' reasoned Drizzt. "We would find little rest,
I fear:'
Belwar looked down the sheer wall to the floor of the large cavern. "Never a
problem,' he said with a snicker. "The bigger ones cannot get up here, and the
smaller ones. . .
well, I have seen the cut of your blades, and you have seen the strength of my
hands. About the smaller ones I shall not worry!"
Drizzt liked the svirfneblin's confidence, and he had to agree that they had found
no other place suitable for use as a dwelling. Water, hard to find and, more often
than not, undrinkable, was a precious commodity in the dry Underdark. With the
lake and the growth about it, Drizzt and Belwar would never have to travel far to
find a meal.
Drizzt was about to agree, but then a movement down by the water caught his
and Belwar's attention.
"And crabs!" spouted the svirfneblin, obviously not having the same reaction to
the sight as the drow. "Magga cammara, dark elf! Crabs! As fme a meal as ever
you will find!"
Indeed it was a crab that had slipped out of the lake, a gigantic, twelve-foot
monster with pincers that could snap a human-or an elf or a gnome-fully in half.
Drizzt looked at Belwar incredulously. "A meal?" he asked.
Belwar's smile rolled right up around his crinkled nose as he banged his hammer
and pick hands together.
They ate crab meat that night, and the day after that, and the day after that, and
the day after that, and Drizzt soon was quite willing to agree that the threechambered
cave by the underground lake made a fme home.
The spirit-wraith paused to consider the red-glowing field. In life, Zaknafein
Do'Urden would have avoided such a patch, respecting the inherent dangers of
odd-glowing rooms and luminous mosses. But to the spirit-wraith the trail was
clear, Drizzt had come this way.
The spirit-wraith waded in, ignoring the noxious puffs of deadly spores that shot
up at him with every step, choking spores that filled the lungs of unfortunate
creatures.
But Zaknafein did not draw breath.
Then came the rumbling as the grubber rushed to protect its domain. Zaknafein
fell into a defensive crouch, the instincts of the being he once had been sensing
the danger. The grubber rolled into the glowing moss patch but noticed no
intruder to chase away. It moved in anyway, thinking that a meal of baruchies
might not be such a bad thing.
When the grubber reached the center of the chamber, the spirit-wraith let his
levitation spell dissipate. Zaknafein landed on the monster's back, locking his
legs fast. The grubber thrashed and thundered about the room, but Zaknafein's
balance did not waver. The grubber's hide was thick and tough, able to repel all
but the finest of weapons, which Zaknafein possessed.
"What was that?" Belwar asked one day, stopping his work on the new door
blocking their cave opening. Down by the pool, Drizzt apparently had heard the
sound as well, for he had dropped the helmet he was using to fetch some water
and had drawn both scimitars. He held a hand up to keep the burrow-warden
silent, then picked his way back to the ledge for a quiet conversation.
The sound, a loud clacking noise, came again.
"You know it, dark elf?'" Belwar asked softly.
Drizzt nodded. "Hook horrors,' he replied, "possessing the keenest hearing in all
the Underdark:' Drizzt kept his recollections of his sole encounter with this type of
monster to himself. It had occurred during a patrol exercise, with Drizzt leading
his Academy class through the tunnels outside Menzoberranzan. The patrol
came upon a group of the giant, bipedal creatures with exoskeletons as hard as
plated metal armor and powerful beaks and claws. The drow patrol, mostly
through Drizzt's exploits, had won the day, but what Drizzt remembered most
keenly was his belief that the encounter had been an exercise planned by the
masters of the Academy, and that they had sacrificed an innocent drow child to
the hook horrors for the sake of realism.
"Let us find them,' Drizzt said quietly but grimly. Belwar paused to catch his
breath when he saw the dangerous simmer in the drow's lavender eyes.
"Hook horrors are dangerous rivals,' Drizzt explained, noticing the deep gnome's
hesitation. "We cannot allow them to roam the region:'
Following the clacking noises, Drizzt had little trouble closing in. He silently
picked his way around a final bend with Belwar close by his side. In a wider
section of the corridor stood a single hook horror, banging its heavy claws
rhythmically against the stone as a svirfneblin miner might use his pickaxe.
Drizzt held Belwar back, indicating that he could dispatch the monster quickly if
he could sneak in on it without being noticed. Belwar agreed but remained poised
to join in at the first opportunity or need.
The hook horror, obviously engaged in its game with the stone wall, did not hear
or see the approaching stealthy drow. Drizzt came right in beside the monster,
looking for the easiest and fastest way to dispatch it. He saw only one opening in
the exoskeleton, a slit between the creature's breastplate and its wide neck.
Getting a blade in there could be a bit of a problem, though, for the hook horror
was nearly ten feet tall.
But the hunter found the solution. He came in hard and fast at the hook horror's
knee, butting with both his shoulders and bringing his blades up into the
creature's crotch.
The hook horror's legs buckled, and it tumbled back over the drow. As agile as
any cat, Drizzt rolled out and sprang on top of the felled monster, both his blades
coming tip in at the slit in the armor.
He could have finished the hook horror at once, his scimitars easily could have
slipped through the bony defenses. But Drizzt saw something-terror?-on the hook
horror's face, something in the creature's expression that should not have been
there. He forced the hunter back inside, took control of his swords, and hesitated
for just a second-long enough for the hook horror, to Drizzt's absolute
amazement, to speak in clear and proper drow language, "Please do...not ...kill. .
. me."
CHAPTER 14
CLACKER
The scimitars slowly eased away from the hook horror's neck. "Not. . . as I . . .
ap-appear,' the monster tried to explain in its halting speech. With each uttered
word, the hook horror seemed to become more comfortable with the language. "I
am . . . pech:'
"Pech?" Belwar gawked, moving up to Drizzt's side. The svirfneblin looked down
at the trapped monster with understandable confusion. " A bit big you are for a
pech,' he remarked.
Drizzt looked from the monster to Belwar, seeking some explanation. The drow
had never heard the word before. "Rock children,' Belwar explained to him.
"Strange little creatures. Hard as the stone and living for no other reason than to
work it:'
"Sounds like a svirfneblin,' Drizzt replied.
Belwar paused a moment to figure out if he had been complimented or insulted.
Unable to discern, the burrow-warden continued somewhat cautiously. "There
are not many pech about, and fewer still that look like this one!" He cast a
doubting eye at the hook horror, then gave Drizzt a look that told the drow to
keep his scimitars at the ready.
"Pech . . . n'n-no more,' the hook horror stammered, clear remorse evident in its
throaty voice. "Pech no more:'
"What is your name?" Drizzt asked it, hoping to find some clues to the truth.
The hook horror thought for a long moment, then shook its great head helplessly.
"Pech . . . n'n-no more,' the monster said again, and it purposely tilted its beaked
face backward, widening the crack in its exoskeleton armor and inviting Drizzt to
finish the strike.
"You cannot remember your name?" Drizzt asked, not so anxious to kill the
creature. The hook horror neither moved nor replied. Drizzt looked to Belwar for
advice, but the burrow-warden only shrugged helplessly.
"What happened?" Drizzt pressed the monster. "You must tell me what
happened to you:'
"W-w-w:' The hook horror struggled to reply. "W-wi-wiz-ard. Evil wi-zard:'
Somewhat schooled in the ways of magic and in the unscrupulous uses its
practitioners often put it to, Drizzt began to understand the possibilities and
began to believe this strange creature. "A wizard changed you?" he asked,
already guessing the answer. He and Belwar exchanging amazed expressions. "I
have heard of such spells:'
"As have I.' agreed the burrow-warden." Magga cammara, dark elf, I have seen
the wizards of Blingdenstone use similar magic when we needed to infiltrate. . :'
The deep gnome paused suddenly, remembering the heritage of the elf he was
addressing.
"Menzoberranzan,' Drizzt finished with a chuckle.
Belwar cleared his throat, a bit embarrassed, and turned back to the monster. "A
pech you once were,' he said, needing to hear the whole explanation spelled out
in one clear thought, "and some wizard changed you into a hook horror:'
"True,' the monster replied. "Pech no more:'
"Where are your companions?" the svirfneblin asked. "If what I have heard of
your people is true, pech do not often travel alone:'
"D-d-d-dead,' said the monster. "Evil w-w-w-"
"Human wizard?" Drizzt prompted.
The great beak bobbed in an excited nod. "Yes, mom-man:'
"And the wizard then left you to your pains as a hook horror,' Belwar said. He and
Drizzt looked long and hard at each other and then the drow stepped away,
allowing the hook horror to rise.
"I w-w-w-wish you w-w-w-would k-k-kill me,' the monster then said, twisting up
into a sitting position. It looked at its clawed hands with obvious disgust. "The sstone,
the stone . . . lost to me:'
Belwar raised his own crafted hands in response. "So had I once believed,' he
said. "You are alive, and no longer are you alone. Come with us to the lake,
where we can talk some more:'
Presently the hook horror agreed and began, with much effort, to raise its
quarter-ton bulk from the floor. Amid the scraping and shuffling of the creature's
hard exoskeleton,
Belwar prudently whispered to Drizzt, "Keep your blades at the ready!"
The hook horror finally stood, towering to its imposing ten-foot height, and the
drow did not argue Belwar's logic.
For many hours, the hook horror recounted its adventures to the two friends. As
amazing as the story was the monster's growing acclimation to the use of
language. This fact, and the monster's descriptions of its previous existence-of a
life tapping and shaping the stone in an almost holy reverence-further convinced
Belwar and Drizzt of the truth of its bizarre tale.
"It feels g-g-good to speak again, though the language is not my own,' the
creature said after a while. "It feels as if I have f-found again a part of what I once
wow-was:'
With his own similar experiences so clear in his mind, Drizzt understood the
sentiments completely.
"How long have you been this way?" Belwar asked.
The hook horror shrugged, its huge chest and shoulders rattling through the
movement. "Weeks, m-months,' it said. "I cannot remember. The time is I-lost to
me:'
Drizzt put his face in his hands and exhaled a deep sigh, in full empathy and
sympathy with the unfortunate creature. Drizzt, too, had felt so lost and alone out
in the wilds. He, too, knew the grim truth of such a fate. Belwar patted the drow
softly with his hammer-hand.
"And where now are you going'?" the burrow-warden asked the hook horror. "Or
where were you coming from?"
"Chasing the w-w-w-" the hook horror replied, fumbling helplessly over that last
word as though the mere mention of the evil wizard pained the creature greatly.
"But so much is I-lost to me. I would find him with I-little effort if I was still p-ppech.
The stones would tell me where to I-look. But I cannot talk to them very
often anymore.' The monster rose from its seat on the stone. "I will go.' it said
determinedly. "You are not safe with me around:'
"You will stay,' Drizzt said suddenly and with a tone of finality that could not be
denied.
"I c-cannot control,' the hook horror tried to explain.
"You've no need to worry,' said Belwar. He pointed to the doorway up on the
ledge at the side of the cavern. "Our home is up there, with a door too small for
you to get through. Down here by the lake you must rest until we all decide our
best course of action:'
The hook horror was exhausted, and the svirfneblin's reasoning seemed sound
enough. The monster dropped heavily back to the stone and curled up as much
as its bulky body would allow. Drizzt and Belwar took their leave, glancing back
at their strange new companion with every step.
"Clacker,' Belwar said suddenly, stopping Drizzt beside him. With great effort, the
hook horror rolled over to consider the deep gnome, understanding that Belwar
had uttered the word in its direction.
"That is what we shall call you, if you have no objections.' the svirfneblin
explained to the creature and to Drizzt.
"Clacker"
"A fitting name,' Drizzt remarked.
"It is a g-good name,' agreed the hook horror, but silently the creature wished
that it could remember its pech name, the name that rolled on and on like a
rounded boulder in a sloping passage and spoke prayers to the stone with each
growling syllable.
"We will widen the door,' Drizzt said when he and Belwar got inside their cave
complex. "So that Clacker may enter and rest beside us in safety:'
"No, dark elf,' argued the burrow-warden. "That we shall not do?'
"He is not safe out there beside the water,' Drizzt replied. "Monsters will find him.'
"Safe enough he is!" snorted Belwar. "What monster would willingly attack a hook
horror?" Belwar understood Drizzt's sincere concern, but he understood, too, the
danger in Drizzt's suggestion. "I have witnessed such spells.' the svirfneblin said
somberly. "They are called polymorph. Immediately comes the change of the
body, but the change of the mind can take time.'
"What are you saying?" Drizzt's voice edged on panic.
Clacker is still a pech,' replied Belwar, "trapped though he is in the body of
a hook horror. But soon, I fear, Clacker will be a pech no more. A hook horror he
will become, mind and body, and however friendly we might be, Clacker will
come to think of us as no more than another meal.'
Drizzt started to argue, but Belwar silenced him with one sobering thought.
"Would you enjoy having to kill him, dark elf?"
Drizzt turned away. "His tale is familiar to me.'
"Not as much as you believe,' replied Belwar.
"I, too, was lost,' Drizzt reminded the burrow-warden.
"So you believe,' Belwar answered. "But that which was essentially Drizzt
Do'Urden remained within you, my friend. You were as you had to be, as the
situation around you forced you to be. This is different. Not just in body, but in
very essence will Clacker become a hook horror. His thoughts will be the
thoughts of a hook horror and, magga cammara, he will not return your grant of
mercy when you are the one on the ground.'
Drizzt could not be satisfied, though he could not refute the deep gnome's blunt
logic. He moved into the complex's left-hand chamber, the one he had claimed
as his bedroom, and fell into his hammock.
"Alas for you, Drizzt Do'Urden," Belwar mumbled under his breath as he watched
the drow's heavy movements, laden with sorrow. "And alas for our doomed pech
friend.' The burrow-warden went into his own chamber and crawled into his
hammock, feeling terrible about the whole situation but determined to remain
coldly logical and practical, whatever the pain. For Belwar understood that Drizzt
felt a kinship to the unfortunate creature, a potentially fatal bond founded in
empathy for Clacker's loss of self.
Later that night, an excited Drizzt shook the svirfneblin from his slumber. "We
must help him,' Drizzt whispered harshly.
Belwar wiped an arm across his face and tried to orient himself. His sleep had
been uneasy, filled with dreams in which he had cried" Bivrip' in an impossibly
loud voice, then had proceeded to bash the life out of his newest companion.
"We must help him!" Drizzt said again, even more forcefully. Belwar could tell by
the drow's haggard appearance that Drizzt had found no sleep this night.
"I am no wizard,' the burrow-warden said. "Neither are-"
"Then we will find one:' Drizzt growled. "We will find the human who cursed
Clacker and force him to reverse the dweomer! We saw him by the stream only a
few days ago. He cannot be so far away!"
"A mage capable of such magic will prove no easy foe,' Belwar was quick to
reply. "Have you so quickly forgotten the fireball?" Belwar glanced to the wall, to
where his scorched leather jack hung on a peg, as if to convince himself. "The
wizard is beyond us, I fear,' Belwar mumbled, but Drizzt could see the lack of
conviction in the burrow-warden's expression as he spoke the words.
"Are you so quick to condemn Clacker?" Drizzt asked bluntly. A wide smile began
to spread over Drizzt's face as he saw the svirfneblin weakening. "Is this the
same Belwar Dissengulp who took in a lost drow? That most honored burrowwarden
who would not give up hope for a dark elf that everyone else considered
dangerous and beyond help?"
"Go to sleep, dark elf,' Belwar retorted, pushing Drizzt away with his hammerhand.
"Wise advice, my friend,' said Drizzt. "And you sleep well. We may have a long
road ahead of us:'
"Magga cammara,' huffed the taciturn svirfneblin, stubbornly holding to his
facade of gruff practicality. He rolled away from Drizzt and soon was snoring.
Drizzt noted that Belwar's snores now sounded from the depths of a deep and
contented sleep.
Clacker beat against the wall with his clawed hands, taptapping the stone
relentlessly.
"Not again,' a flustered Belwar whispered to Drizzt. "Not out here!"
Drizzt sped along the winding corridor, homing in on the monotonous sound.
"Clacker!" he called softly when the hook horror was in sight.
The hook horror turned to face the approaching drow, clawed hands wide and
ready and a growling hiss slipping through his great beak. A moment later,
Clacker realized what he was doing and abruptly stopped.
"Why must you continue that banging?" Drizzt asked him, trying to pretend, even
to himself, that he had not seen Clacker's battle stance. "We are out in the wilds,
my friend. Such sounds invite visitors:'
The giant monster's head drooped. "You should not have c-c-come out with mme,'
Clacker said. "I c-c-cannot-many things will happen that I cannot c-control:'
Drizzt reached up and put a comforting hand on Clacker's bony elbow. "It was my
fault,' the drow said, understanding the hook horror's meaning. Clacker had
apologized for turning dangerously on Drizzt. "We should not have gone off in
different directions,' Drizzt continued, "and I should not have approached you so
quickly and without warning. We will all stay together now, though our search
may prove longer, and Belwar and I will help you to maintain control:'
Clacker's beaked face brightened. "It does feel so very g-good to tot-tap the
stone,' he proclaimed. Clacker banged a claw on the rock as if to jolt his memory.
His voice and his gaze trailed away as he thought of his past life, the one that the
wizard had stolen from him. All the pech's days had been spent tapping the
stone, shaping the stone, talking to the precious stone.
"You will be pech again,' Drizzt promised.
Belwar, approaching from the tunnel, heard the drow's words and was not so
certain. They had been out in the tunnels for more than a week and had found
not a sign of the wizard. The burrow-warden took some comfort in the fact that
Clacker seemed to be winning back part of himself from his monstrous state,
seemed to be regaining a measure of his pech personality. Belwar had watched
the same transformation in Drizzt just a few weeks before, and beneath the
survivalistic barriers of the hunter that Drizzt had become, Belwar had discovered
his closest friend.
But the burrow-warden took care not to assume the same results with Clacker.
The hook horror's condition was the result of powerful magic, and no amount of
friendship could reverse the workings of the wizard's dweomer. In finding Drizzt
and Belwar, Clacker had been granted a temporary- and only temporary-reprieve
from a miserable and undeniable fate.
They moved on through the tunnels of the Underdark for several more days
without any luck. Clacker's personality still did not deteriorate, but even Drizzt,
who had left the cave complex beside the lake so full of hope, began to feel the
weight of increasing reality.
Then, just as Drizzt and Belwar had begun discussing returning to their home,
the group came into a fair-sized cavern littered with rubble from a recent collapse
of the ceiling.
"He has been here!" Clacker cried, and he offhandedly lifted a huge boulder and
tossed it against a distant wall, where it shattered into so much rubble. "He has
been here!"
The hook horror rushed about, smashing stone and throwing boulders with
growing, explosive rage.
"How can you know?" Belwar demanded, trying to stop his giant friend's tirade.
Clacker pointed up at the ceiling. "He d-did this. The w-w-w-he did this!"
Drizzt and Belwar exchanged concerned glances. The chamber's ceiling, which
had been about fifteen feet up, was gouged and blasted, and in its center loomed
a massive hole that extended up to twice the ceiling's former height. If magic had
caused that devastation, it was powerful magic indeed!
"The wizard did this?" Belwar echoed. He cast that stubbornly practical look he
had perfected toward Drizzt one more time.
"His t-t-tower," Clacker replied, and rushed off about the chamber to see if he
could discern which exit the wizard ad taken.
Now Drizzt and Belwar were completely at a loss, and Clacker, when he finally
took the time to look at them, realized their confusion.
"The w-w-w-"
"Wizard,' Belwar put in impatiently.
Clacker took no offense, even appreciated the assistance.
"The w-wizard has a t-tower," the excited hook horror tried o explain. "A g-great
iron t-tower that he takes with him, setting it up wherever it is c-c-convenient:'
Clacker looked up at the ruined ceiling. "Even if it does not always fit:'
"He carries a tower?" Belwar asked, his long nose crinkling right up over itself.
Clacker nodded excitedly, but then didn't take the time to explain further, for he
had found the wizard's trail, a clear boot print in a bed of moss leading down
another of the corridors.
Drizzt and Belwar had to be satisfied with their friend's incomplete explanation,
for the chase was on. Drizzt took up the lead, using all the skills he had learned
in the drow Academy and had heightened during his decade alone in the
Underdark. Belwar, with his innate racial understanding of the Underdark and his
magically lighted brooch, kept track of their direction, and Clacker, in those
instances when he fell more completely back into his former self, asked the
stones for guidance. The three of them passed another blasted chamber, and
another chamber that showed clear signs of the tower's presence, though its
ceiling was high enough to accommodate the structure.
A few days later, the three companions turned into a wide and high cavern, and
far back from them, beside a rushing stream, loomed the wizard's home. Again
Drizzt and Belwar looked at each other helplessly, for the tower stood fully thirty
feet high and twenty across, its smooth metallic walls mocking their plans. They
took separate and cautious routes to the structure and were even more amazed,
for the tower's walls were pure adamantite, the hardest metal in all the world.
They found only a single door, small and barely showing its outline in the
perfection of the tower's craftsmanship. They didn't have to test it to know that it
was secure against unwelcome visitors.
"The w-w-w-he is in there,' Clacker snarled, running his claws over the door in
desperation.
"Then he will have to come out,' Drizzt reasoned. "And when he does, we will be
waiting for him:'
The plan did not satisfy the pech. With a rumbling roar that echoed throughout
the region, Clacker threw his huge body against the tower door, then jumped
back and slammed it again. The door didn't even shudder under the pounding,
and it quickly became obvious to the deep gnome and the drow that Clacker's
body would certainly lose the battle.
Drizzt tried vainly to calm his giant friend, while Belwar moved off to the side and
began a familiar chant.
Finally, Clacker tumbled down in a heap, sobbing in exhaustion and pain and
helpless rage. Then Belwar, his mithril hands sparking whenever they touched,
waded in.
"Move aside!" the burrow-warden demanded. "I have come too far to be stopped
by a single door!" Belwar moved directly in front of the small door and slammed
his enchanted hammer-hand at it with all his strength. A blinding flash of blue
sparks burst out in every direction. The deep gnome's muscled arms worked
furiously, scraping and bashing, but when Belwar had exhausted his energy, the
tower door showed only the slightest of scratches and superficial burns.
Belwar banged his hands together in disgust, showering himself in harmless
sparks, and Clacker agreed wholeheartedly with his frustrated sentiments. Drizzt,
though, was more angry and concerned than his friends. Not only had the
wizard's tower stopped them, but the wizard inside undoubtedly knew of their
presence. Drizzt moved about the structure cautiously, noting the many arrow
slits. Creeping below one, he heard a soft chant, and though he couldn't
understand the wizard's words, he could guess easily enough the human's intent.
"Run!" he yelled to his companions, and then, in sheer desperation, he grabbed a
nearby stone and hauled it up into the opening of the arrow slit. Luck was with
the drow, for the wizard completed his spell just as the rock slammed against the
opening. A lightning bolt roared out, shattered the stone, and sent Drizzt flying,
but it reflected back into the tower.
"Damnation! Damnation!" came a squeal from inside the tower. "I hate vhen that
hoppens!"
Belwar and Clacker rushed over to help their fallen friend. The drow was only
stunned, and he was up and ready before they ever got there.
"Oh, you ist going to pay dearly for that one, yest you ist!" came a cry from within.
"Run away!" cried the burrow-warden, and even the outraged hook horror was in
full agreement. But as soon as Belwar looked into the drow's lavender eyes, he
knew that
Drizzt would not flee. Clacker, too, backed away a step from the fires gathering
within Drizzt Do'Urden.
"Magga cammara, dark elf, we cannot get in.' the svirfneblin prudently reminded
Drizzt.
Drizzt pulled out the onyx figurine and held it against the arrow slit, blocking it
with his body. "We shall see,' he growled, and then he called to Guenhwyvar.
The black mist swirled about and found only one empty path clear from the
figurine.
"I vill keell you alll" cried the unseen wizard.
The next sound from within the tower was a low panther's growl, and then the
wizard's voice rang out again. "I cood be wrong!"
"Open the door!" Drizzt screamed. "On your life, foul wizard!"
"Never!"
Guenhwyvar roared again, then the wizard screamed and the door swung wide.
Drizzt led the way. They entered a circular room, the tower's bottom level. An iron
ladder ran up its center to a trap door, the wizard's attempted escape route. The
human hadn't quite made it, however, and he hung upside-down off the back side
of the ladder, one leg hooked at the knee through a rung. Guenhwyvar,
appearing fully healed from the ordeal in the acid lake and looking again like the
most magnificent of panthers, perched on the other side of the ladder, casually
mouthing the wizard's calf and foot.
"Do come een!" the wizard cried, throwing his arms out wide, then drawing them
back to pull his drooping robe up from his face. Wisps of smoke rose from the
remaining tatters of the lightning-blackened robe. "I am Brister Fendlestick.
Velcome to my hoomble home!"
Belwar kept Clacker at the door, holding his dangerous friend back with his
hammer-hand, while Drizzt moved up to take charge of the prisoner. The drow
paused long enough to regard his dear feline companion, for he hadn't
summoned Guenhwyvar since that day when he had sent the panther away to
heal.
"You speak drow,' Drizzt remarked, grabbing the wizard by the collar and agilely
spinning him down to his feet. Drizzt eyed the man suspiciously, he had never
seen a human before the encounter in the corridor by the stream. To this point,
the drow wasn't overly impressed.
"Many tongues ist known to me,' replied the wizard, brushing himself off. And
then, as if his proclamation was meant to carry some great importance, he
added, "I am Brister Fendlestick!"
"Do you name pech among your languages?" Belwar growled from the door.
"Pech?" the wizard replied, spitting the word with apparent distaste.
"Pech.' Drizzt snarled, emphasizing his response by snapping the edge of a
scimitar to within an inch of the wizard's neck.
Clacker took a step forward, easily sliding the blocking svirfneblin across the
smooth floor.
"My large friend was once a pech,' Drizzt explained. "You should know that:'
"Pech.' the wizard spat. "Useless leetle things, and always they ist in the way:'
Clacker took another long stride forward.
"Be on with it, drow,' Belwar begged, futilely leaning against the huge hook
horror.
"Give him back his identity,' Drizzt demanded. "Make our friend a pech again.
And be quick about it:'
"Bah!" snorted the wizard. "He ist better off as he ist!" the unpredictable human
replied. "Why would anyone weesh to remain a pech?"
Clacker's breath came in a loud gasp. The sheer strength of his third stride sent
Belwar skidding off to the side.
"Now, wizard,' Drizzt warned. From the ladder, Guenhwyvar issued a long and
hungry growl.
"Oh, very vell, very vell!" the wizard spouted, throwing up his hands in disgust.
"Wretched pech!" He pulled an immense book from of a pocket much too small to
hold it.
Drizzt and Belwar smiled to each other, thinking victory at hand. But then the
wizard made a fatal mistake.
"I shood have killed him as I killed the others,' he mumbled under his breath, too
low for even Drizzt, standing right beside him, to make out the words.
But hook horrors had the keenest hearing of any creature in the Underdark.
A swipe of Clacker's enormous claw sent Belwar spiraling across the room.
Drizzt, spinning about at the sound of heavy steps, was thrown aside by the
momentum of the rushing giant, the drow's scimitars flying from his hands. And
the wizard, the foolish wizard, padded Clacker's impact with the iron ladder, a jolt
so vicious that it bowed the ladder and sent Guenhwyvar flying off the other side.
Whether the initial crushing blow of the hook horror's five-hundred-pound body
had killed the wizard was academic by the time either Drizzt or Belwar had
recovered enough to call out to their friend. Clacker's hooks and beak slashed
and snapped relentlessly, tearing and crushing. Every now and then came a
sudden flash and a puff of smoke as another of the many magical items that the
wizard carried snapped apart.
And when the hook horror had played out his rage and looked around at his three
companions, surrounding him in battle-ready stances, the lump of gore at
Clacker's feet was no longer recognizable.
Belwar started to remark that the wizard had agreed to change Clacker back, but
he didn't see the point. Clacker fell to his knees and dropped his face into his
claws, hardly believing what he had done.
"Let us be gone from this place,' Drizzt said, sheathing his blades.
"Search it,' Belwar suggested, thinking that marvelous treasures might be hidden
within. But Drizzt could not remain for another moment. He had seen too much of
himself in the unbridled rage of his giant companion, and the smell of the
bloodied heap filled him with frustrations and fears that he could not tolerate.
With Guenhwyvar in tow, he walked from the tower.
Belwar moved over and helped Clacker to his feet, then guided the trembling
giant from the structure. Stubbornly practical, though, the burrow-warden made
his companions wait around while he scoured the tower, searching for items that
might aid them, or for the command word that would allow him to carry the tower
along. But either the wizard was a poor man-which Belwar doubted-or he had his
treasures safely hidden away, possibly in some other plane of existence, for the
svirfneblin found nothing beyond a simple water skin and a pair of worn boots. If
the marvelous adamantite tower had a command word, it had gone to the grave
with the wizard.
Their journey home was a quiet one, lost in private concerns, regrets, and
memories. Drizzt and Belwar did not have to speak their most pressing fear. In
their discussions with Clacker, they both had learned enough of the normally
peaceable race of pech to know that Clacker's murderous outburst was far
removed from the creature he once had been.
But, the deep gnome and the drow had to admit to themselves, Clacker's actions
were not so far removed from the creature he was fast becoming.
CHAPTER 15
POINTED REMINDERS
"What do you know?" Matron Malice demanded of Jarlaxle, walking at her side
across the compound of House Do'Urden. Malice normally would not have been
so conspicuous with the infamous mercenary, but she was worried and impatient.
Reported stirring within the hierarchy of Menzoberranzan's ruling families did not
bode well for House Do'Urden.
"Know?" Jarlaxle echoed, feigning surprise.
Malice scowled at him, as did Briza, walking on the other side of the brash
mercenary.
Jarlaxle cleared his throat, though it sounded more like a laugh. He couldn't
supply Malice with the details of the rumblings, he was not so foolish as to betray
the more powerful houses of the city. But Jarlaxle could tease Malice with a
simple statement of logic that only confirmed what she already had assumed.
"Zin-carla, the spirit-wraith, has been in use for a very long time:'
Malice struggled to keep her breathing inconspicuously smooth. She realized that
Jarlaxle knew more than he would say, and the fact that the calculating
mercenary had so coolly stated the obvious told her that her fears were justified.
The spirit-wraith of Zaknafein had indeed been searching for Drizzt for a very
long time. Malice did not need to be reminded that the Spider Queen was not
known for her patience.
"Have you any more to tell me?" Malice asked.
Jarlaxle shrugged noncommittally.
"Then be gone from my house,' the matron mother snarled.
Jarlaxle hesitated for a moment, wondering if he should demand payment for the
little information he had provided. Then he dipped into one of his well-known low,
hat-sweeping bows and turned for the gate.
He would find his payment soon enough.
In the anteroom to the house chapel an hour later, Matron Malice rested back in
her throne and let her thoughts roll out into the winding tunnels of the wild
Underdark. Her telepathy with the spirit-wraith was limited, usually a passing of
strong emotions, nothing more. But from those internal struggles of Zaknafein,
who had been Drizzt's father and closest friend in life and was now Drizzt's
deadliest enemy, Malice could learn much of her spirit-wraith's progress.
Anxieties caused by Zaknafein's inner struggle inevitably would increase
whenever the spirit-wraith got close to Drizzt.
Now, after the disturbing meeting with Jarlaxle, Malice had to learn of Zaknafein's
progress. A short time later, her efforts were rewarded.
"Matron Malice insists that the spirit-wraith has gone west, beyond the svirfneblin
city,' Jarlaxle explained to Matron Baenre. The mercenary had set out straight
from House Do'Urden to the mushroom grove in the southern end of
Menzoberranzan, to where the greatest of the drow families were housed.
"The spirit-wraith keeps to the trail,' Matron Baenre mused, more to herself than
to her informant. "That is good:'
"But Matron Malice believes that Drizzt has a lead of many days, even weeks,'
Jarlaxle went on.
"She told you this?" Matron Baenre asked incredulously, amazed that Malice
would reveal such damaging information.
"Some information can be gathered without words.' the mercenary replied slyly.
"Matron Malice's tone inferred much that she did not wish me to know:'
Matron Baenre nodded and closed her wrinkled eyes, wearied by the whole
experience. She had played a role in getting Matron Malice onto the ruling
council, but now she could only sit and wait to see if Malice would remain.
"We must trust in Matron Malice,' Matron Baenre said at length.
Across the room from Baenre and Jarlaxle, Elviddinvelp, Matron Baenre's
companion mind flayer, turned its thoughts away from the conversation. The
drow mercenary had reported that Drizzt had gone west, far out from
Blingdenstone, and that news carried potential importance that could not be
ignored.
The mind flayer projected its thoughts far out to the west, issued a clear warning
down the corridors that were not as empty as they might appear.
Zaknafein knew as soon as he looked upon the still lake that he had caught up to
his quarry. He dropped low into the crooks and crags along the wide cavern's
wall and made his way about. Then he found the unnatural door and the cave
complex beyond.
Old feelings stirred within the spirit-wraith, feelings of the kinship he once had
known with Drizzt, New, savage emotions were quick to overwhelm them,
though, as Matron Malice came into Zaknafein's mind in a wild fury. The spiritwraith
burst through the door, swords drawn, and tore through the complex. A
blanket flew into the air and came down in pieces as Zaknafein's swords sliced
across it a dozen times.
When the fit of rage had played itself out, Matron Malice's monster settled back
into a crouch to examine the situation. Drizzt was not at home.
It took the hunting spirit -wraith only a short time to determine that Drizzt, and a
companion, or perhaps even two, had set out from the cavern a few days before.
Zaknafein's tactical instincts told him to lie in wait, for surely this was no phony
campsite, as had been the one outside the deep gnome city. Surely Zaknafein's
prey meant to return. The spirit-wraith sensed that Matron Malice, back on her
throne in the drow city, would endure no delays. Time was running short for herthe
dangerous whispers were growing louder every day-and Malice's fears and
impatience cost her dearly this time.
Only a few hours after Malice had driven the spirit-wraith into the tunnels in
pursuit of her renegade son, Drizzt, Belwar, and Clacker returned to the cavern
by a different route.
Drizzt sensed at once that something was very wrong. He drew his blades and
rushed across to the ledge, springing up to the door of the cave complex before
Belwar and Clacker could even begin to question him.
When they arrived at the cave, they understood Drizzt's alarm. The place was
destroyed, hammocks and bedrolls torn apart, bowls and a small box that had
been stuffed with gathered foods smashed and thrown to every comer. Clacker,
who could not fit inside the complex, spun from the door and moved away,
ensuring that no enemy was lurking in the far reaches of the large cavern.
"Magga cammara!" Belwar roared. "What monster did this?"
Drizzt held up a blanket and pointed out the clean cuts in the fabric. Belwar did
not miss the drow's meaning.
"Blades,' the burrow-warden said grimly. "Fine and crafted blades:'
"The blades of a drow,' Drizzt finished for him.
"Far are we from Menzoberranzan,' Belwar reminded him. "Far out in the wilds,
beyond the knowledge and sight of your kin:'
Drizzt knew better than to agree with such an assumption. For the bulk of his
young life, Drizzt had witnessed the fanaticism that guided the lives of Lloth's foul
priestesses.
Drizzt himself had traveled on a raid many miles to the surface of the Realms, a
raid that suited no better purpose than to give the Spider Queen a sweet taste of
the blood of surface elves. "Do not underestimate Matron Malice.' he said grimly.
"If it is indeed your mother come to call,' Belwar growled, clapping his hands
together, "she will find more than she expected waiting for her. We shall lie for
her.' the svirfneblin promised, "the three of us.'
"Do not underestimate Matron Malice,' Drizzt said again. "This encounter was no
coincidence, and Matron Malice will be prepared for whatever we have to offer:'
"You cannot know that,' Belwar reasoned, but when the burrow-warden
recognized the sincere dread in the drow's lavender eyes, all conviction drifted
out of his voice.
They gathered what few usable items remained and set out only a short while
later, again going west to put even more distance between themselves and
Menzoberranzan.
Clacker took up the lead, for few monsters would willingly put themselves in the
path of a hook horror. Belwar walked in the middle, the solid anchor of the party,
and Drizzt floated along silently far to the rear, taking it upon himself to protect
his friends if his mother's agents should catch up to them. Belwar had reasoned
that they might have a good lead on whoever ruined their home. If the
perpetrators had set off in pursuit of them from the cave complex, following their
trail to the tower of the dead wizard, many days would pass before the enemy
even returned to the cavern of the lake. Drizzt was not so secure in the burrowwarden's
reasoning.
He knew his mother too well.
After several interminable days, the troupe came into a region of broken floors,
jagged walls, and ceilings filled with stalactites that leered down at them like
poised monsters. They closed in their ranks, needing the comfort of
companionship. Despite the attention it might draw, Belwar took out his magically
lighted brooch and pinned it on his leather jack. Even in the glow, the shadows
thrown by sharp-edged mounds promised only peril.
This region seemed more hushed than the Underdark's usual stillness. Rarely did
travelers in the subterranean world of the Realms hear the sounds of other
creatures, but here the quiet felt more profound, as though all life somehow had
been stolen from the place. Clacker's heavy steps and the scrape of Belwar's
boots echoed unnervingly off the many stone faces.
Belwar was the first to sense approaching danger. Subtle vibrations in the stone
called out to the svirfneblin that he and his friends were not alone. He stopped
Clacker with his pick-hand, then looked back to Drizzt to see if the drow shared
his uneasy feelings.
Drizzt signaled to the ceiling, then levitated up into the darkness, seeking an
ambush spot among the many stalactites. The drow drew one of his scimitars as
he ascended and put his other hand on the onyx figurine in his pocket.
Belwar and Clacker set up behind a ridge of stone, the deep gnome mumbling
through the refrain that would enchant his mithril hands. Both felt better in the
knowledge that the drow warrior was above them, looking over them.
But Drizzt was not the only one who figured the stalactites as an ambush spot.
As soon as he entered the layer of jagged, spearlike stones, the drow knew he
was not alone.
A form, slightly larger than Drizzt but obviously humanoid, drifted out around a
nearby stalactite. Drizzt kicked off a stone to propel himself at it, drawing his
other scimitar as he went. He knew his peril a moment later, for his enemy's head
resembled a four-tentacled octopus. Drizzt had never actually viewed such a
creature before, but he knew what it was: an illithid, a mind flayer, the most evil
and most feared monster in all the Underdark.
The mind flayer struck first, long before Drizzt had closed within his scimitar's
limited range. The monster's tentacles wiggled and waved, and-fwoop!-a cone of
mental energy rolled over Drizzt. The drow fought back against the impending
blackness with all of his willpower. He tried to concentrate on his target, tried to
focus his anger, but the illithid blasted again. Another mind fIayer appeared and
fired its stunning force at Drizzt from the side.
Belwar and Clacker could see nothing of the encounter, for Drizzt was above the
radius of the deep gnome's illuminating brooch. Both sensed that something was
going on above them, though, and the burrow-warden risked a whispered call to
his friend.
"Drizzt?"
His answer came only a moment later, when two scimitars clanged to the stone.
Belwar and Clacker started toward the weapons in surprise, then fell back.
Before them the air shimmered and wavered, as if an invisible door to some
other plane of existence was being opened.
An illithid stepped through, appearing right before the surprised friends and
letting out its mental blast before either of them even had time to cry out. Belwar
reeled and stumbled to the floor, but Clacker, his mind already in conflict
between hook horror and pech, was not so adversely affected.
The mind fIayer loosed its force again, but the hook horror stepped right through
the stunning cone and smashed the illithid with a single blow of his enormous
clawed hand.
Clacker looked all around, and then up. Other mind flayers were drifting down
from the ceiling, two holding Drizzt by the ankles. More invisible doors opened. In
an instant, blast after blast came at Clacker from every angle, and the defense of
his dual personalities' inner turmoil quickly began to wear away. Desperation and
welling outrage took over Clacker's actions.
Clacker was solely a hook horror at that moment, acting on the instinctive rage
and ferocity of the monstrous breed. But even the hard shell of a hook horror
proved no defense against the mind fIayers' continuing insidious blasts. Clacker
rushed at the two holding Drizzt.
The darkness caught him halfway there.
He was kneeling on the stone-he knew that much. Clacker crawled on, refusing
to surrender, refusing to relinquish the sheer anger.
Then he lay on the floor, with no thoughts of Drizzt or Belwar or rage.
There was only darkness.
PART 4
HELPLESS
There have been many times in my life when I have felt helpless. It is perhaps
the most acute pain a person can know, founded in frustration and ventless rage.
The nick of a sword upon a battling soldier's arm cannot compare to the anguish
a prisoner feels at the crack of a whip. Even if the whip does not strike the
helpless prisoner's body, it surely cuts deeply at his soul.
We all are prisoners at one time or another in our lives, prisoners to ourselves or
to the expectations of those around us. It is a burden that all people endure, that
all people despise, and that few people ever learn to escape. I consider myself
fortunate in this respect, for my life has traveled along a fairly straight-running
path of improvement. Beginning in Menzoberranzan, under the relentless
scrutiny of the evil Spider Queen's high priestesses, I suppose that my situation
could only have improved.
In my stubborn youth, I believed that I could stand alone, that I was strong
enough to conquer my enemies with sword and with principles. Arrogance
convinced me that by sheer determination, I could conquer helplessness itself.
Stubborn and foolish youth, I must admit for when I look back on those years
now, I see quite clearly that rarely did I stand alone and rarely did I have to stand
alone. Always there were friends, true and dear, lending me support even when I
believed I did not want it and even when I did not realize they were doing it.
Zaknafein, Belwar, Clacker, Mooshie, Bruenor Regis, Cattie-brie, Wulfgar and of
course, Guenhwyvar dear Guenhwyvar: These were the companions who
justified my principles, who gave me the strength to continue against any foe,
real or imagined. These were the companions who fought the helplessness, the
rage, and frustration.
These were the friends who gave me my life.
-Drizzt Do'Urden
CHAPTER16
INSIDIOUS CHAINS
Clacker looked down to the far end of the long and narrow cavern, to the manytowered
structure that served as a castle to the illithid community. Though his
vision was poor, the hook horror could make out the squat forms crawling about
on the rock castle, and he could plainly hear the chiming of their tools. They were
slaves, Clacker knew duergar, goblins, deep gnomes, and several other races
that Clacker did not know-serving their illithid masters with their skills in
stonework, helping to continue the improvement and design on the huge lump of
rock that the mind flayers had claimed as their home.
Perhaps Belwar, so obviously suited to such endeavors, was already at work on
the massive building.
The thoughts fluttered through Clacker's mind and were forgotten, replaced by
the hook horror's less involved instincts. The mind flayers' stunning blasts had
reduced Clacker's mental resistance and the wizard's polymorph spell had taken
more of him, so much so that he could not even realize the lapse. Now his twin
identities battled evenly, leaving poor Clacker in a state of simple confusion.
If he understood his dilemma, and if he had known the fate of his friends, he
might have considered himself fortunate.
The mind flayers suspected that there was more to Clacker than his hook horror
body would indicate. The illithid community's survival was based on knowledge
and by reading thoughts, and though they could not penetrate the jumble that
was Clacker's mind, they saw clearly that the mental workings within the bony
exoskeleton were decidedly unlike those expected from a simple Underdark
monster.
The mind flayers were not foolish masters, and they knew, too, the dangers of
trying to decipher and control an armed and armored quarter-ton killing monster.
Clacker was simply too dangerous and unpredictable to be kept in close
quarters. In the illithids' slave society, however, there was a place for everyone.
Clacker stood upon an island of stone, a slab of rock perhaps fifty yards in
diameter and surrounded by a deep and wide chasm. With him were assorted
other creatures, including a small herd of rothe and several battered duergar who
obviously had spent too long under the illithids' mind-melting influences. The gray
dwarves sat or stood, blank-faced, staring out at nothing at all and awaiting,
Clacker soon came to understand, their turn on the supper table of their cruel
masters.
Clacker paced the island's perimeter, searching for some escape, though the
pech part of him would have recognized the futility of it all. Only a single bridge
spanned the warding chasm, a magical and mechanical thing that recoiled tightly
against the chasm's other side when not in use.
A group of mind flayers with a single burly ogre slave approached the lever that
controlled the bridge. Immediately, Clacker was assaulted by their telepathic
suggestions. A single course of action cut through the jumble of his thoughts, and
at that moment, he learned of his purpose on the island. He was to be the
shepherd for the mind flayers' flock. They wanted a gray dwarf and a rothe, and
the shepherd slave obediently went to work.
Neither victim offered any resistance. Clacker neatly twisted the gray dwarf's
neck, then, not so neatly, bashed in the rothe's skull. He sensed that the illithids
were pleased, and this notion brought some curious emotions to him, satisfaction
being the most prevalent.
Hoisting both creatures, Clacker moved to the gorge to stand opposite the group
of illithids. An illithid pulled back on the bridge's waist-high lever. Clacker noted
that the action of the trigger was away from him, an important fact, though the
hook horror did not exactly understand why at that time. The stone-and-metal
bridge grumbled and shook and shot out from the cliff opposite Clacker. It rolled
out toward the island until it caught securely on the stone at Clacker's feet.
Come to me, came one illithid's command. Clacker might have managed to resist
the command if he had seen any point in it. He stepped out onto the bridge,
which groaned considerably under his bulk.
Halt! Drop the kills, came another suggestion when the hook horror was halfway
across. Drop the kills! the telepathic voice cried again. And get back to your
island!
Clacker considered his alternatives. The rage of the hook horror welled within
him, and his thoughts that were pech, angered by the loss of his friends, were in
complete agreement. A few strides would take him to his enemies.
On command from the mind flayers, the ogre moved up to the lip of the bridge. It
stood a bit taller than Clacker and was nearly as wide, but it was unarmed and
would not be able to stop him. Off to the side of the burly guard, though, Clacker
recognized a more serious defense. The illithid who had pulled the lever to
activate the bridge stood by it still, one hand, a curious four-fingered appendage,
eagerly clenching and unclenching it.
Clacker would not get across the remaining portion and past the blocking ogre
before the bridge rolled away from under him, dropping him into the depths of the
chasm. Reluctantly, the hook horror placed his kills on the bridge and stepped
back to his stone island. The ogre came out immediately and retrieved the dead
dwarf and rothe for its masters.
The illithid then pulled the lever, and, in the blink of an eye, the magical bridge
snapped back across the gorge, leaving Clacker stranded once more.
Eat, one of the illithids instructed. An unfortunate rothe wandered by the hook
horror as the command came surging into his thoughts, and Clacker absently
dropped a heavy claw onto its head.
As the illithids departed, Clacker sat down to his meal, reveling in the taste of
blood and meat. His hook horror side won over completely during the raw feast,
but every time Clacker looked back across the gorge and down the narrow
cavern to the illithid castle, a tiny pech voice within him piped out its concern for a
svirfneblin and a drow.
Of all the slaves recently captured in the tunnels outside the illithid castle, Belwar
Dissengulp was the most sought after. Aside from the curiosity factor of the
svirfneblin's mithril hands, Belwar was perfectly suited for the two duties most
desired in an illithid slave: working the stone and fighting in the gladiatorial arena.
The illithid slave auction went into an uproar when the deep gnome was marched
forward. Bids of gold and magic items, private spells and tomes of knowledge,
were thrown about with abandon. In the end, the burrow-warden was sold to a
group of three mind flayers, the three who had led the party that had captured
him. Belwar, of course, had no knowledge of the transaction, before it was ever
completed, the deep gnome was ushered away down a dark and narrow tunnel
and placed in a small, unremarkable room.
A short while later, three voices echoed in his mind, three unique telepathic
voices that the deep gnome understood and would not forget-the voices of his
new masters.
An iron portcullis rose before Belwar, revealing a well-lighted circular room with
high walls and rows of audience seats above them.
Do come out, one of the masters bade him, and the burrow-warden, fully desiring
only to please his master, did not hesitate. When he exited the short
passageway, he saw that several dozen mind flayers had gathered all about on
stone benches. Those strange four-fingered illithid hands pointed down at him
from every direction, all backed by the same expressionless octopus face.
Following the telepathic thought, Belwar had no trouble finding his master among
the crowd, busily arguing odds and antes with a small group.
Across the way, a similar portcullis opened and a huge ogre stepped out.
Immediately the creature's eyes went up into the crowd as it sought its own
master, the focal point of its existence.
This evil ogre beast has threatened me, my brave svirfneblin champion, came
the telepathic encouragement of Belwar's master a short while later, after all of
the betting had been settled. Do destroy it for me.
Belwar needed no further prompting, nor did the ogre, having received a similar
message from its master. The gladiators rushed each other furiously, but while
the ogre was young and rather stupid, Belwar was a crafty old veteran.
He slowed at the last moment and rolled to the side. The ogre, trying desperately
to kick at him as it ended in a charge, stumbled for just a moment.
Too long.
Belwar's hammer-hand crunched into the ogre's knee with a crack that
resounded as powerfully as a wizard's lightning bolt. The ogre lurched forward,
nearly doubling over, and Belwar drove his pickaxe-hand into the ogre's meaty
backside. As the giant monster stumbled off balance to the side, Belwar threw
himself at its feet, tripping it to the stone.
The burrow-warden was up in an instant, leaping onto the prone giant and
running right up it toward its head. The ogre recovered quickly enough to catch
the svirfneblin by the front of his jack, but even as the monster started to hurl the
nasty little opponent away, Belwar dug his pickaxe-hand deep into its chest.
Howling in rage and pain, the stupid ogre continued its throw, and Belwar was
jerked out straight.
The sharp tip of the pickaxe held its grip and the deep gnome's momentum tore a
wide gash in the ogre's chest. The ogre rolled and flailed, finally freeing itself
from the cruel mithril hand. A huge knee caught Belwar in the rump, launching
him to the stone many feet away. The burrow-warden came back up to his feet
after a few short bounces, dazed and smarting but still desiring nothing but to
please his master.
He heard the silent cheering and telepathic shouting of every illithid in the room,
but one call cut through the mental din with precise clarity. Kill it! Belwar's master
commanded.
Belwar didn't hesitate. Still flat on its back, the ogre clutched at its chest, trying
vainly to stop its lifeblood from flowing away. The wounds it already had suffered
probably would have proved fatal, but Belwar was far from satisfied. This
wretched thing had threatened his master! The burrow-warden charged straight
at the top of the ogre's head, his hammer-hand leading the way. Three quick
punches softened the monster's skull, then the pickaxe dived in for the killing
blow.
The doomed ogre jerked wildly in the last spasms of its life, but Belwar felt no
pity. He had pleased his master, nothing else in all the world mattered to the
burrow-warden at that moment.
Up in the stands, the proud owner of the svirfneblin champion collected his due
of gold and potion bottles. Contented that it had done well in selecting this one,
the illithid looked back to Belwar, who still chopped and bashed at the corpse.
Although it enjoyed watching its new champion at savage play, the illithid quickly
sent out a message to cease.
The dead ogre, after all, was also part of the bet. No sense in ruining dinner.
At the heart of the illithid castle stood a huge tower, a gigantic stalagmite
hollowed and sculpted to house the most important members of the strange
community. The inside of the giant stone structure was ringed by balconies and
spiraling stairways, each level housing several of the mind flayers. But it was the
bottom chamber, unadorned and circular, that held the most important being of
all, the central brain.
Fully twenty feet in diameter, this boneless lump of pulsating flesh tied the mind
flayer community together in telepathic symbiosis. The central brain was the
composite of their knowledge, the mental eye that guarded their outside
chambers and which had heard the warning cries of the illithid from the drow city
many miles to the east. The illithids of the community, the central brain was the
coordinator of their entire existence and nothing short of their god. Thus, only a
very few slaves were allowed within this special tower, captives with sensitive
and delicate fingers that could massage the illithid god-thing and soothe it with
tender brushes and warm fluids.
Drizzt Do'Urden was among this group.
The drow knelt on the wide walkway that ringed the room, reaching out to stroke
the amorphous mass, feeling keenly its pleasures and displeasures. When the
brain became upset, Drizzt felt the sharp tingles and the tenseness in the veined
tissues. He would massage more forcefully, easing his beloved master back to
serenity.
When the brain was pleased, Drizzt was pleased. Nothing else in all the world
mattered, the renegade drow had found his purpose in life. Drizzt Do'Urden had
come home.
'A most profitable capture, that one.' said the mind flayer in its watery,
otherworldly voice. The creature held up the potions it had won in the arena.
The other two illithids wiggled their four-fingered hands, indicating their
agreement. Arena champion, one of them remarked telepathically.
And tooled to dig,' the third added aloud. A notion entered its mind and, thus, the
minds of the others. Perhaps to carve? The three illithids looked over to the far
side of the chamber, where the work had begun on a new cubby area. The first
illithid wiggled its fingers and gurgled, "In time the svirfneblin will be put to such
menial tasks. Now he must win for me more potions, more gold. A most profitable
capture!"
"As were all taken in the ambush, said the second.
"The hook horror tends the herd,' explained the third.
"And the drow tends the brain,' gurgled the first. "I noticed him as I ascended to
our chamber. That one will prove a proficient masseuse, to the pleasure of the
brain and to the benefit of us all:'
"And there is this,' said the second, one of its tentacles snapping out to nudge
the third. The third illithid held up an onyx figurine.
Magic? wondered the first.
Indeed, the second mentally responded. Linked to the Astral Plane. An entity
stone, I believe.
"Have you called to it?" the first asked aloud.
Together, the other illithids clenched their hands, the mind flayer signal for no. "A
dangerous foe, mayhaps,' explained the third. "We thought it prudent to observe
the beast on its own plane before summoning it:'
"A wise choice,' agreed the first. "When will you be going"
"At once,' said the second. "And will you accompany us?"
The first illithid clenched its fists, then held out the potion bottle. "Profits to be
won,' it explained.
The other two wiggled their fingers excitedly. Then, as their companion retired to
another room to count its winnings, they sat down in comfortable, overstuffed
chairs and prepared themselves for their journey.
They floated together, leaving their corporeal bodies at rest on the chairs. They
ascended beside the figurine's link to the Astral Plane, visible to them in their
astral state as a thin silvery cord. They were beyond their companions' cavern
now, beyond the stones and noises of the Material Plane, floating into the vast
serenity of the astral world. Here, there were few sounds other than the
continuous chanting of the astral wind. Here, too, there was no solid structurenone
in terms of the material world-with matter being defined in gradations of
light.
The illithids veered away from the figurine's silver cord as they neared the
completion of their astral ascent. They would come into the plane near to the
entity of the great panther, but not so close as to make it aware of their presence.
Illithids were not normally welcome guests, being despised by nearly every
creature on every plane they traveled.
They came fully into their astral state without incident and had little trouble
locating the entity represented by the figurine.
Guenhwyvar romped through a forest of starlight in pursuit of the entity of the elk,
continuing the endless cycle. The elk, no less magnificent than the panther,
leaped and sprang in perfect balance and unmistakable grace. The elk and
Guenhwyvar had played out this scenario a million times and would play it out a
million, million more. This was the order and harmony that ruled the panther's
existence, that ultimately ruled the planes of all the universe.
Some creatures, though, like the denizens of the lower planes, and like the mind
flayers that now observed the panther from afar, could not accept the simple
perfection of this harmony and could not recognize the beauty of this eternal
hunt. As-they watched the wondrous panther in its life's play, the illithids' only
thoughts centered on how they might use the cat to their best advantage.
CHAPTER 17
A DELICATE BALANCE
Belwar studied his latest foe carefully, sensing some familiarity with the armored
beast's appearance. Had he befriended such a creature before? he wondered.
Whatever doubts the svirfneblin gladiator might have had, though, could not
break into the deep gnome's consciousness, for Belwar's illithid master continued
its insidious stream of telepathic deceptions.
Kill it my brave champion, the illithid pleaded from its perch in the stands. It is
your enemy, most assuredly, and it shall bring harm to me if you do not kill it!
The hook horror, much larger than Belwar's lost friend, charged the svirfneblin,
having no reservations about making a meal of the deep gnome.
Belwar coiled his stubby legs under him and waited for the precise moment. As
the hook horror bore down on him, its clawed hands wide to prevent him from
dodging to the side, Belwar sprang straight ahead, his hammer-hand leading the
way right up into the monster's chest. Cracks ran all through the hook horror's
exoskeleton from the sheer force of the blow, and the monster swooned as it
continued forward.
Belwar's flight made a quick reversal, for the hook horror's weight and
momentum was much greater than the svirfneblin's. He felt his shoulder snap out
of joint, and he, too, nearly fainted from the sudden agony. Again the callings of
Belwar's illithid master overruled his thoughts, and even the pain.
The gladiators crashed together in a heap, Belwar buried beneath the monster's
bulk. The hook horror's encumbering size prevented it from getting its arms at the
burrow-warden, but it had other weapons. A wicked beak dived at Belwar. The
deep gnome managed to get his pickaxe-hand in, its path, but still the hook
horror's giant head pushed on, twisting Belwar's arm backward. The hungry beak
snapper and twisted barely an inch from the burrow-warden's face.
Throughout the stands of the large arena, illithids jumped about and chatted
excitedly, both in their telepathic mode and in their gurgling, watery voices.
Fingers wiggled in opposition to clenched fists as the mind flayers prematurely
tried to collect on bets.
Belwar's master, fearing the loss of its champion, called out to the hook horror's
master. Do you yield? it asked, trying to make the thoughts appear confident.
The other illithid turned away smugly and shut down its telepathic receptacles.
Belwar's master could only watch.
The hook horror could not drive any closer, the svirfneblin's arm was locked
against the stone at the elbow the mithril pickaxe firmly holding back the
monster's deadly beak. The hook horror reverted to a different tactic, raising its
head free of Belwar's hand in a sudden jerking movement.
Belwar's warrior intuition saved him at that moment, for the hook horror reversed
suddenly and the deadly beak dived back in. The normal reaction and expected
defense would have been to swipe the monster's head to the side with the
pickaxe-hand. The hook horror anticipated such a counter, and Belwar
anticipated that it would.
Belwar threw his arm across in front of him, but shortened his reach so that the
pickaxe passed well below the hook horror's plunging beak. The monster,
meanwhile, believing that Belwar was attempting to strike a blow, stopped its
dive exactly as it had planned.
But the mithril pickaxe reversed its direction much quicker than the monster
anticipated. Belwar's backhand caught the hook horror right behind the beak and
snapped its head to the side. Then, ignoring the searing pain from his injured
shoulder, Belwar curled his other arm at the elbow and punched out. There was
no strength behind the blow, but at that moment, the hook horror came back
around the pickaxe and opened its beak for a bite at the deep gnome's exposed
face.
Just in time to catch a mithril hammer instead.
Belwar's hand wedged far back in the hook horror's mouth, opening the beak
more than it was designed to open. The monster jerked wildly, trying to free itself,
each sudden twist sending waves of pain down the burrow-warden's wounded
arm.
Belwar responded with equal fury, whacking again and again at the side of the
hook horror's head with his free hand. Blood oozed down the giant beak as the
pickaxe dug in.
"Do you yield?" Belwar's master now shouted in its watery voice at the hook
horror's master.
The question was premature again, however, for down in the arena, the armored
hook horror was far from defeated. It used another weapon: its sheer weight. The
monster ground its chest into the lying deep gnome, trying simply to crush the life
out of him.
Do you yield?" the hook horror's master retorted, seeing the unexpected turn of
events.
Belwar's pickaxe caught the hook horror's eye, and the monster howled in agony.
Illithids jumped and pointed, wiggling their fingers and clenching and unclenching
their fists.
Both masters of the gladiators understood how much they had to lose. Would
either participant ever be fit to fight again if the battle was allowed to continue?
Mayhaps we should consider a draw? Belwar's master offered telepathically. The
other illithid readily agreed. Both masters sent messages down to their
champions. It took several brutal moments to calm the fires of rage and end the
contest, but, eventually, the illithid suggestions overruled the gladiators' savage
instincts of survival. Suddenly, both the deep gnome and the hook horror felt an
affinity for each other, and when the hook horror rose, it lent a claw to the
svirfneblin to help him to his feet.
A short while later, Belwar sat on the single stone bench in his tiny, unadorned
cell, just inside the tunnel to the circular arena. The burrow-warden's hammerwielding
arm had gone completely numb and a gruesome purplish blue bruise
covered his entire shoulder. Many days would pass before Belwar would be able
to compete in the arena again, and it troubled him deeply that he would not soon
please his master.
The illithid came to him to inspect the damage. It had potions that could help heal
the wound, but even with the magical aid, Belwar obviously needed time to rest.
The mind flayer had other uses for the svirfneblin, though. A cubby in its private
quarters needed completing.
Come, the illithid bade Belwar, and the burrow-warden jumped to his feet and
rushed out, respectfully remaining a stride behind his master.
A kneeling drow caught Belwar's attention as the mind flayer led him through the
bottom level of the central tower. How fortunate the dark elf was to be able to
touch and bring pleasure to the central brain of the community! Belwar then
thought no more of it, though, as he made the ascent to the structure's third level
and to the suite of rooms that his three masters shared.
The other two illithids sat in their chairs, motionless and apparently lifeless.
Belwar's master paid little heed to the spectacle, it knew that its companions
were far away in their astral travels and that their corporeal bodies were quite
safe. The mind flayer did pause to wonder, for just a moment, how its
companions fared in that distant plane. Like all illithids, Belwar's master enjoyed
astral travel, but pragmatism, a definite illithid trait, kept the creature's thoughts
on the business at hand. It had made a large investment in buying Belwar, an
investment it was not willing to lose.
The mind flayer led Belwar into a back room and sat him down on an
unremarkable stone table. Then, suddenly, the illithid bombarded Belwar with
telepathic suggestions and questions, probing as it roughly set the injured
shoulder and applied wrappings. Mind flayers could invade a creature's thoughts
on first contact, either with their stunning blow or with telepathic communications,
but it could take weeks, even months, for an illithid to fully dominate its slave.
Each encounter broke down more of the slave's natural resistance to the illithid's
mental insinuations, revealed more of the slave's memories and emotions.
Belwar's master was determined to know everything about this curious
svirfneblin, about his strange, crafted hands and about the unusual company he
chose to keep. This time during the telepathic exchange, the illithid focused on
the mithril hands, for it sensed that Belwar was not performing up to his
capabilities.
The illithid's thoughts probed and prodded, and sometime later fell into a deep
corner of Belwar's mind and learned a curious chant.
Bivrip? it questioned Belwar. Simply on reflex, the burrow-warden banged his
hands together, then winced in pain from the shock of the blow.
The illithid's fingers and tentacles wiggled eagerly. It had touched upon
something important, it knew, something that could make its champion stronger.
If the mind flayer allowed Belwar the memory of the chant, however, it would give
back to the svirfneblin a part of himself, a conscious memory of his days before
slavery.
The illithid handed Belwar still another healing potion, then glanced around to
inspect its wares. If Belwar was to continue as a gladiator, he would have to face
the hook horror again in the arena, by illithid rules, a rematch was required after
a draw. Belwar's master doubted that the svirfneblin would survive another battle
against that armored champion.
Unless. . .
Dinin Do'Urden paced his lizard mount through the region of Menzoberranzan's
lesser houses, the most congested section of the city. He kept the cowl of his
piwafwi pulled low about his face and bore no insignia revealing him as a noble of
a ruling house. Secrecy was Dinin's ally, both from the watching eyes of this
dangerous section of the city, and from the disapproving glares of his mother and
sister. Dinin had survived long enough to understand the dangers of
complacency. He lived in a state that bordered on paranoia, he never knew when
Malice and Briza might be watching.
A group of bugbears sauntered out of the walking lizard's way. Fury swept
through the proud elderboy of House Do'Urden at the slaves' casual manner.
Dinin's hand went instinctively to the whip on his belt.
Dinin wisely checked his rage, though, reminding himself of the possible
consequences of being revealed. He turned another of the many sharp corners
and moved down through a row of connected stalagmite mounds.
"So you have found me,' came a familiar voice from behind and to the side.
Surprised and afraid, Dinin stopped his mount and froze in his saddle. He knew
that a dozen tiny crossbows-at least-were trained on him.
Slowly, Dinin turned his head to watch Jarlaxle's approach. Out here in the
shadows, the mercenary seemed much different from the overly polite and
compliant drow Dinin had known in House Do'Urden. Or perhaps it was just the
specter of the two sword-wielding drow guards standing by Jarlaxle's sides and
Dinin's own realization that he didn't have Matron Malice around to protect him.
"One should ask permission before entering another's house.' Jarlaxle said
calmly but with definite threatening undertones. "Common courtesy:'
"I am out in the open streets.' Dinin reminded him.
Jarlaxle's smile denied the logic. "My house.'
Dinin remembered his station, and the thoughts inspired some courage. "Should
a noble of a ruling house, then, ask Jarlaxle's permission before leaving his front
gate?" the elderboy growled. "And what of Matron Baenre, who would not enter
the least of Menzoberranzan's houses without seeking permission from the
appropriate matron mother? Should Matron Baenre, too, ask permission of
Jarlaxle, the houseless rogue?" Dinin realized that he might be carrying the insult
a bit too far, but his pride demanded the words.
Jarlaxle relaxed visibly and the smile that came to his face almost appeared
sincere. "So you have found me,' he said again, this time dipping into his
customary bow. "State your purpose and be done with it.'
Dinin crossed his arms over his chest belligerently, gaining confidence at the
mercenary's apparent concessions.
"Are you so certain that I was looking for you?"
Jarlaxle exchanged grins with his two guards. Snickers from unseen soldiers in
the shadows of the lane stole a good measure of Dinin's budding confidence.
"State your business, Elderboy, Jarlaxle said more pointedly, "and be done with
it.'
Dinin was more than willing to complete this encounter as quickly as possible. "I
require information concerning Zin-carla,' he said bluntly. "The spirit-wraith of
Zaknafein has walked the Underdark for many days. Too many, perhaps?"
Jarlaxle's eyes narrowed as he followed the elderboy's reasoning. "Matron Malice
sent you to me?" he stated as much as asked.
Dinin shook his head and Jarlaxle did not doubt his sincerity. "You are as wise as
you are skilled in the blade," the mercenary offered graciously, slipping into a
second bow, one that seemed somehow ambiguous out here in Jarlaxle's dark
world.
"I have come of my own initiative, Dinin said firmly. "I must find some answers.'
"Are you afraid, Elderboy?"
"Concerned, Dinin replied sincerely, ignoring the mercenary's taunting tone. "I
never make the error of underestimating my enemies, or my allies. Jarlaxle cast
him a confused glance.
"I know what my brother has become,' Dinin explained. "And I know who
Zaknafein once was:'
"Zaknafein is a spirit-wraith now,' Jarlaxle replied, "under the control of Matron
Malice:'
"Many days,' Dinin said quietly, believing the implications of his words spoke
loudly enough.
"Your mother asked for Zin-carla,' Jarlaxle retorted, a bit sharply. "It is Lloth's
greatest gift, given only so that the Spider Queen is pleased in return. Matron
Malice knew the risk when she requested Zin-carla. Surely you understand,
Elderboy, that spirit -wraiths are given for the completion of a specific task:'
"And what are the consequences of failure?" Dinin asked bluntly, matching
Jarlaxle's perturbed attitude.
The mercenary's incredulous stare was all the answer Dinin needed. "How long
does Zaknafein have?" Dinin asked.
Jarlaxle shrugged noncommittally and answered with a question of his own.
"Who can guess at Lloth's plans?" he asked. "The Spider Queen can be a patient
one-if the gain is great enough to justify the wait. Is Drizzt's value such?" Again
the mercenary shrugged. "That is for Lloth, and for Lloth alone, to decide:'
Dinin studied Jarlaxle for a long moment, until he was certain that the mercenary
had nothing left to offer him. Then he turned back to his lizard mount and pulled
the cowl of his piwafwi low. When he regained his saddle, Dinin spun about,
thinking to issue one final comment, but the mercenary and his guards were
nowhere to be found.
"Bivrip!" Belwar cried, completing the spell. The burrow-warden banged his
hands together again, and this time did not wince, for the pain was not so
intense. Sparks flew when the mithril hands crashed together, and Belwar's
master clapped its four-fingered hands in absolute glee. The illithid simply had to
see its gladiator in action now. It looked about for a target and spotted the
partially cut cubby. A whole set of telepathic instructions roared into the burrowwarden's
mind as the illithid imparted mental images of the design and depth it
wanted for the cubby.
Belwar moved right in. Unsure of the strength in his wounded shoulder, the one
guiding the hammer-hand, he led with the pickaxe. The stone exploded into dust
under the enchanted hand's blow, and the illithid sent a clear message of its
pleasure flooding into Belwar's thoughts. Even the armor of a hook horror would
not stand against such a blow!
Belwar's master reinforced the instructions it had given to the deep gnome, then
moved into an adjoining chamber to study. Left alone to his work, so very similar
to the tasks he had worked at for all of his century of life, Belwar found himself
wondering.
Nothing in particular crossed the burrow-warden's few coherent thoughts, the
need to please his illithid master remained the foremost guidance of his
movements. For the first time since his capture, though, Belwar wondered.
Identity? Purpose?
The enchanting spell-song of his mithril hands ran through his mind again,
became a focus of his unconscious determination to sort through the blur of his
captors' insinuations.
"Bivrip?" he muttered again, and the word triggered a more recent memory, an
image of a drow elf, kneeling and massaging the god-thing of the illithid
community.
"Drizzt?" Belwar muttered under his breath, but the name was forgotten in the
next bang of his pick-hand, obliterated by the svirfneblin's continuing desire to
please his illithid master.
The cubby had to be perfect.
A lump of flesh rippled under an ebony-skinned hand and a wave of anxiety
flooded through Drizzt, imparted by the central brain of the mind flayer
community. The drow's only emotional response was sadness, for he could not
bear to see the brain in distress. Slender fingers kneaded and rubbed, Drizzt
lifted a bowl of warm water and poured it slowly over the flesh. Then Drizzt was
happy, for the flesh smoothed out under his skilled touch, and the brain's anxious
emotions soon were replaced by a teasing hint of gratitude.
Behind the kneeling drow, across the wide walkway, two illithids watched it all
and nodded approvingly. Drow elves always had proved skilled at this task, and
this latest captive was one of the finest so far.
The illithids wiggled their fingers eagerly at the implications of that shared
thought. The central brain had detected another drow intruder in the illithid webs
that were the tunnels beyond the long and narrow cavern-another slave to
massage and sooth.
So the central brain believed.
Four illithids moved out from the cavern, guided by the images imparted by the
central brain. A single drow had entered their domain, an easy capture for four
illithids.
So the mind flayers believed.
CHAPTER 18
THE ELEMENT OF SURPRISE
The spirit-wraith picked his silent way through the broken and twisting corridors,
traveling with the light and practiced steps of a veteran drow warrior. But the
mind flayers, guided by their central brain, anticipated Zaknafein's course
perfectly and were waiting for him.
As Zaknafein came beside the same stone ridge where Belwar and Clacker had
fallen, an illithid jumped out at him and-fwoop!-blasted its stunning energy.
At that close range, few creatures could have resisted such a powerful blow, but
Zaknafein was an undead thing, a being not of this world. The proximity of
Zaknafein's mind, linked to another plane of existence, could not be measured in
steps. Impervious to such mental attacks, the spirit-wraith's swords dived straight
in, each taking the startled illithid in one of its milky, pupil-lesss eyes.
The three other mind flayers floated down from the ceiling, loosing their stunning
blasts as they came. Swords in hand, Zaknafein waited confidently for them, but
the mind flayers continued their descent. Never before had their mental attacks
failed them, they could not believe that the incapacitating cones of energy would
prove futile now. Fwoop! A dozen times the illithids fired, but the spirit-wraith
seemed not to notice. The illithids, beginning to worry, tried to reach inside
Zaknafein's thoughts to understand how he had possibly avoided the effects.
What they found was a barrier beyond their penetrating capabilities, a barrier that
transcended their present plane of existence.
They had witnessed Zaknafein's swordplay against their unfortunate companion
and had no intention of engaging this skilled drow in melee combat.
Telepathically, they promptly agreed to reverse their direction.
But they had descended too far.
Zaknafein cared nothing for the illithids and would have walked contentedly off on
his way. The illithid's misfortune, though, the spirit-wraith's instincts, and
Zaknafein's past-life knowledge of mind flayers, led him to a simple conclusion: If
Drizzt had traveled this way-and Zaknafein knew that he had-he most likely had
encountered the mind flayers. An undead being could defeat them, but a mortal
drow, even Drizzt, would find himself at a sorry disadvantage.
Zaknafein sheathed one sword and sprang up to the ridge of stone. In the blur of
a second fast leap, the spirit-wraith caught one of the rising illithids by the ankle.
Fwoop! The creature blasted again, but it was a doomed thing with little defense
against Zaknafein's slashing sword. With incredible strength, the spirit-wraith
heaved himself straight up, his sword leading the way. The illithid slapped down
at the blade vainly, but its empty hands could not defeat the spirit-wraith's aim.
Zaknafein's sword sliced up through the mind flayer's belly and into its heart and
lungs.
Gasping and clutching at the huge wound, the illithid could only watch helplessly
as Zaknafein found his footing and kicked off the mind flayer's chest. The dying
illithid tumbled away, head over heels, and slammed into the wall, then hung
grotesquely in midair even after death, its blood spattering the floor below.
Zaknafein's leap sent him crashing into the next floating illithid, and the
momentum took both of them into the last of the group. Arms flailed and
tentacles waved wildly, seeking some hold on the drow warrior's flesh. More
deadly, though, was the blade, and a moment later, the spirit-wraith pulled free of
his latest two victims, enacted a levitation spell of his own, and floated gently
back to the stone floor. Zaknafein walked calmly away, leaving three illithids
hanging dead in the air for the duration of their levitation spells, and a fourth dead
on the floor.
The spirit-wraith did not bother to wipe the blood from his swords, he realized
that very soon there would be more killing..
The two mind flayers continued observing the panther's entity. They did not know
it, but Guenhwyvar was aware of their presence. In the Astral Plane, where
material senses such as smell and taste had no meaning, the panther substituted
other subtle senses. Here, Guenhwyvar hunted through a sense that translated
the emanations of energy into clear mental images, and the panther could readily
distinguish between the aura of an elk and a rabbit without ever seeing the
particular creature. Illithids were not so uncommon on the Astral Plane, and
Guenhwyvar recognized their emanations.
The panther had not yet decided whether their presence was mere coincidence
or was in some way connected to the fact that Drizzt had not called in many
days. The apparent interest the mind flayers showed in Guenhwyvar suggested
the latter, a most disturbing notion to the panther. Still, Guenhwyvar did not want
to make the first move against so dangerous an enemy. The panther continued
its daily routines, keeping a wary eye on the unwanted audience.
Guenhwyvar noticed the shift in the mind flayers' emanations as the creatures
began a rapid descent back to the Material Plane. The panther could wait no
longer.
Springing through the stars, Guenhwyvar charged upon the mind flayers.
Occupied in their efforts to begin their return journey, the illithids did not react
until it was too late.
The panther dived in below one, catching its silvery cord in fangs of sharp light.
Guenhwyvar's neck flexed and twisted, and the silvery cord snapped. The
helpless illithid drifted away, a castaway on the Astral Plane.
The other mind flayer, more concerned with saving itself, ignored its companion's
frenzied pleas and continued descent toward the planar tunnel that would return
it to its corporeal body. The illithid almost slipped beyond Guenhwyvar's reach,
but the panther's claws latched on firmly just as it entered the planar tunnel.
Guenhwyvar rode along.
From his little stone island, Clacker saw the commotion growing all through the
long and narrow cavern. Illithids rushed all about, telepathically commanding
slaves into defensive formations. Lookouts disappeared through every exit, while
other mind flayers floated up into the air to keep a general watch on the situation.
Clacker recognized that some crisis had come upon the community, and a single
logical thought forced its way through the hook horror's base thinking: If the mind
flayers became preoccupied with some new enemy, this might be his chance to
escape. With a new focus to his thinking, Clacker's pech side found a firm
footing. His largest problem could be the chasm, for he certainly could not leap
across it. He figured that he could toss a gray dwarf or a rothe the distance, but
that would hardly aid his own escape. Clacker's gaze fell on the lever of the
bridge, then back to his companions on the stone island. The bridge was
retracted, the high lever leaned toward the island. A well-aimed projectile might
push it back. Clacker banged his huge claws together-an action that reminded
him of Belwar-and hoisted a gray dwarf high into the air. The unfortunate
creature soared toward the lever but came up short, instead slamming into the
chasm wall and plummeting to its death.
Clacker stamped an angry foot and turned to find another missile. He had no
idea of how he would get to Drizzt and Belwar, and at that moment, he didn't
pause to worry about them. Clacker's problem right now was getting off his prison
island.
This time a young rothe went high into the air.
There was no subtlety, no secrecy, to Zaknafein's entrance. Having no fear of the
mind flayers' primary attack methods, the spirit-wraith walked straight into the
long and narrow cavern, right out into the open. A group of three illithids
descended on him immediately, loosing their stunning blasts.
Again the spirit-wraith walked through the mental energy without a flinch, and the
three illithids found the same fate as the four that had stood against Zaknafein
out in the tunnels.
Then came the slaves. Desiring only to please their masters, goblins, gray
dwarves, orcs, and even a few ogres, charged at the drow invader. Some
brandished weapons, but most had only their hands and teeth, thinking to bury
the lone drow under their sheer numbers.
Zaknafein's swords and feet were too quick for such straightforward tactics. The
spirit-wraith danced and slashed, darting in one direction then reversing his
motion suddenly and hacking down his closest pursuers.
Behind the action, the illithids formed their own defensive lines, reconsidering the
wisdom of their tactics. Their tentacles wiggled wildly as their mental
communications flooded forth, trying to make some sense of this unexpected
turn. They had not trusted enough in their slaves to hand them all weapons, but
as slave after slave fell to the stone, clawing at mortal wounds, the mind flayers
came to regret their mounting losses. Still, the illithids believed they would win
out. Behind them, more groups of slaves were being herded down to join the
fray. The lone invader would tire, his steps would slow, and their horde would
crush him.
The mind flayers could not know the truth of Zaknafein. They could not know that
he was an undead thing, a magically animated thing that would not tire and
would not slow. Belwar and his master watched the spasmodic jerking of one of
the illithid bodies, a telltale sign that the host spirit was returning from its astral
journey. Belwar did not understand the implications of the convulsive
movements, but he sensed that his master was glad, and that, in turn, pleased
him.
But Belwar's master was also a bit concerned that only one of its companions
was returning, for the central brain's summons took the highest priority and could
not be ignored. The mind flayer watched as its companion's spasms settled into a
pattern, and then was even more confused, for a dark mist appeared around the
body.
At the same instant the illithid returned to the Material Plane, Belwar's master
telepathically shared in its pain and terror. Before Belwar's master could begin to
react, though,
Guenhwyvar materialized atop the seated illithid, tearing and slashing at the
body.
Belwar froze as a flicker of recognition coursed through him. "Bivrip?" he
whispered under his breath, and then, "Drizzt?" and the image of the kneeling
drow came clearly into his mind.
Kill it, my brave champion! Do kill it! Belwar's master implored, but it was already
too late for the illithid's unfortunate companion. The seated mind flayer flailed
away frantically, its tentacles wiggled and latched onto the cat in an attempt to
get at Guenhwyvar's brain. Guenhwyvar swiped across with a mighty claw, a
single blow that tore the illithid's octopus head from its shoulders.
Belwar, his hands still enchanted from his work on the cubby, advanced slowly
toward the panther, his steps bound not by fear, but by confusion. The burrowwarden
turned to his master and asked, "Guenhwyvar?"
The mind flayer knew that it had given too much back to the svirfneblin. The
recall of the enchanting spell had inspired other, dangerous memories in this
slave. No longer could Belwar be relied upon.
Guenhwyvar sensed the illithid's intent and sprang out from the dead mind flayer
only an instant before the remaining creature blasted at Belwar. Guenhwyvar hit
the burrow-warden squarely, sending him sprawling to the floor. Feline muscles
flexed and strained as the cat landed, turning Guenhwyvar on the spot at an
angle for the room's exit.
Fwoop! The mind flayer's assault clipped Belwar as he tumbled, but the deep
gnome's confusion and his mounting rage held off the insidious attack. For that
one moment, Belwar was free, and he rolled to his feet, viewing the illithid as the
wretched and evil thing that it was.
"Go, Guenhwyvar!" the burrow-warden cried, and the cat needed no prodding. As
an astral being, Guenhwyvar understood much about illithid society and knew the
key to any battle against a lair of such creatures. The panther flew against the
door with all its weight, bursting out onto the balcony high above the chamber
that held the central brain.
Belwar's master, fearing for its god-thing, tried to follow, but the deep gnome's
strength had returned tenfold with his anger, and his wounded arm felt no pain as
he smashed his enchanted hammer-hand into the squishy flesh of the illithid's
head. Sparks flew and scorched the illithid's face, and the creature slammed
back into the wall, its milky, pupil-less eyes staring at Belwar in disbelief.
Then it slid, ever so slowly, to the floor, down into the darkness of death.
Forty feet below the room, the kneeling drow sensed his revered master's fear
and outrage and looked up just as the black panther sprang out into the air. Fully
entranced by the central brain, Drizzt did not recognize Guenhwyvar as his
former companion and dearest friend, he saw at that moment only a threat to the
being he most loved. But Drizzt and the other massaging slaves could only watch
helplessly as the mighty panther, teeth bared and paws wide, plummeted down
onto the middle of the bulbous mass of veined flesh that ruled the illithid
community.
CHAPTER 19
HEADACHES
Approximately one hundred twenty illithids resided in and around the stone castle
in the long and narrow cavern, and everyone of them felt the same searing
headache when Guenhwyvar dived into the community's central brain.
Guenhwyvar plowed through the mass of defenseless flesh, the cat's great claws
tearing and slashing a path through the gore. The central brain imparted
emotions of absolute terror, trying to inspire its servants. Understanding that help
would not soon arrive, the thing reverted to pleading with the panther.
Guenhwyvar's primal ferocity, however, allowed for no mental intrusions. The
panther dug on savagely and was buried in the spurting slime.
Drizzt shouted in outrage and ran all about the walkway, trying to find some way
to get at the intruding panther. Drizzt felt his beloved master's anguish keenly
and pleaded for somebody-anybody-to do something. Other slaves jumped and
cried, and mind flayers ran about in a frenzy, but Guenhwyvar was out in the
center of the huge mass, beyond the reach of any weapons the mind flayers
could use.
A few moments later, Drizzt stopped his jumping and shouting. He wondered
where and who he was, and what in the Nine Hells this great disgusting lump in
front of him possibly could be. He looked around the walkway and caught similar
confused expressions on the faces of several duergar dwarves, another dark elf,
two goblins, and a tall and wickedly scarred bugbear. The mind flayers still
rushed about, looking for some attack angle on the panther, the primary threat,
and paid no heed to the confused slaves. Guenhwyvar made a sudden
appearance from behind the folds of brain. The cat came up over a fleshy ridge
for just a moment, then disappeared back into the gore. Several mind flayers
fired their mind blasts at the fleeting target, but Guenhwyvar was out of sight too
quickly for their energy cones to strike-but not too quickly for Drizzt to catch a
glimpse.
"Guenhwyvar?" the drow cried as a multitude of thoughts rushed back into his
mind. The last thing he remembered was floating up among the stalactites in a
broken corridor, up to where other sinister shapes lurked.
An illithid moved right beside the drow, too intent on the action within the brain to
realize that Drizzt was a slave no longer. Drizzt had no weapons other than his
own body, but he hardly cared in that moment of sheer anger. He leaped high
into the air behind the unsuspecting monster and kicked his foot into the back of
the thing's octopus head. The illithid tumbled forward onto the central brain and
bounced along the rubbery folds several times before it could find any hold.
All about the walkway, the slaves realized their freedom. The gray dwarves
banded together immediately and took down two illithids in a wild rush,
pummeling the creatures and stomping on them with their heavy boots.
Fwoop! A blast came from the side, and Drizzt turned to see the other dark elf
reeling from the stunning blow. A mind flayer rushed in on the drow and grabbed
him in a tight hug. Four tentacles latched on to the doomed dark elf's face,
clamping on, then digging in toward his brain.
Drizzt wanted to go to the drow's aid, but a second illithid moved between them
and took aim. Drizzt dived to the side as another attack sounded. Fwoop! He
came up running, desperately trying to put more ground between himself and the
illithid. The other drow's scream held Drizzt for a moment, though, and he
glanced back over his shoulder.
Grotesque, bulging lines crossed up the drow's face, a visage contorted by more
anguish than Drizzt had ever before witnessed. Drizzt saw the illithid's head jerk,
and the tentacles, buried beneath the drow's skin and reaching and sucking at
his brain, pulsed and bulged. The doomed drow screamed again, one final time,
then he fell limp in the illithid's arms and the creature finished its gruesome feast.
The scarred bugbear unwittingly saved Drizzt from a similar fate. In its flight, the
seven foot-tall creature crossed right between Drizzt and the pursuing mind flayer
just as the illithid fired again. The blow stunned the bugbear for the moment it
took the illithid to close in. As the mind flayer reached for its supposedly helpless
victim, the bugbear swung a huge arm and knocked the pursuer to the stone.
More mind flayers rushed out onto the balconies overlooking the circular
chamber. Drizzt had no idea where his friends might be, or how he might escape,
but the single door he spotted beside the walkway seemed his only chance. He
charged straight at it, but it burst open just before he arrived.
Drizzt crashed into the waiting arms of yet another illithid.
If the inside of the stone castle was a tumult of confusion, the outside was chaos.
No slaves charged at Zaknafein now. The wounding of the central brain had
freed them from the mind flayers' suggestions, and now the goblins, gray
dwarves, and all the others were more concerned with their own escape. Those
closest to the cavern exits rushed out, others ran about wildly, trying to keep out
of range of the continuing illithid mind blasts.
Hardly giving his actions a thought, Zaknafein whipped across with a sword,
taking out a goblin as it ran screaming past. Then the spirit-wraith closed in on
the creature that had been pursuing the goblin. Walking through yet another
stunning blast, Zaknafein chopped the mind flayer down.
In the stone castle, Drizzt had regained his identity, and the magical spells
imbued upon the spirit-wraith honed in on the target's thought patterns. With a
guttural growl,
Zaknafein made a straight course toward the castle, leaving a host of dead and
wounded, slave and illithid alike, in his wake.
Another rothe bleated out in surprise as it soared through the air. Three of the
beasts limped about across the way, a fourth had followed the duergar to the
bottom of the chasm. This time, though, Clacker's aim was true, and the small
cowlike creature slammed into the lever, throwing it back. At once, the enchanted
bridge rolled out and secured itself at Clacker's feet. The hook horror scooped up
another gray dwarf, just for luck, and started out across the bridge.
He was nearly halfway across when the first mind flayer appeared, rushing
toward the lever. Clacker knew that he couldn't possibly get all the way across
before the illithid disengaged the bridge.
He had only one shot.
The gray dwarf, oblivious to its surroundings, went high into the air above the
hook horror's head. Clacker held his throw and continued across, letting the
illithid close in as much as possible. As the mind flayer reached a four-fingered
hand toward the lever, the duergar missile crashed into its chest, throwing it to
the stone.
Clacker ran for his life. The illithid recovered and pushed the lever forward. The
bridge snapped back, opening the deep chasm.
A final leap just as the metal-and-stone bridge zipped out from under his feet
sent Clacker crashing into the side of the chasm. He got his arms and shoulders
over the lip of the gorge and kept enough wits about him to quickly scramble over
to the side.
The illithid pulled back on the lever, and the bridge shot out again, clipping
Clacker. The hook horror had moved far enough to the side, though, and
Clacker's grip was strong enough to hold against the force as the rushing bridge
scraped across his armored chest.
The illithid cursed and pulled the lever back, then rushed to meet the hook horror.
Weary and wounded, Clacker had not yet begun to pull himself up when the
illithid arrived. Waves of stunning energy rolled over him. His head drooped and
he slid back several inches before his claws found another hold.
The mind flayer's greed cost it dearly. Instead of simply blasting and kicking
Clacker from the ledge, it thought it could make a quick meal of the helpless hook
horror's brain. It knelt before Clacker, four tentacles diving in eagerly to find an
opening in his facial armor.
Clacker's dual entities had resisted the illithid blasts out in the tunnels, and now,
too, the stunning mental energy had only a minimal effect. When the illithid's
octopus head appeared right in front of his face, it shocked Clacker back to
awareness.
A snap of a beak removed two of the probing tentacles, then a desperate lunge
of a claw caught the illithid's knee. Bones crushed into dust under the mighty
grip, and the illithid cried in agony, both telepathically and in its watery,
otherworldly voice.
A moment later, its cries faded as it plummeted down the deep chasm. A
levitation spell might have saved the falling illithid, but such spellcasting required
concentration and the pain of a torn face and crushed knee delayed such
actions. The illithid thought of levitating at the same moment that the point of a
stalagmite drove through its backbone.
The hammer-hand crashed through the door of another stone chest. "Damn!"
Belwar spat, seeing that this one, too, contained nothing more than illithid
clothing. The burrow-warden was certain that his equipment would be nearby,
but already half of his former masters' rooms lay in ruin with nothing to show for
the effort. Belwar moved back into the main chamber and over to the stone
seats. Between the two chairs, he spotted the figurine of the panther. He
scooped it into a pouch, then squashed the head of the remaining illithid, the
astral castaway, with his pickaxe-hand almost as an afterthought, in the
confusion, the svirfneblin had nearly forgotten that one monster remained.
Belwar heaved the body away, sending it down in a heap on the floor.
"Magga cammara,' the svirfneblin muttered when he looked back to the stone
chair and saw the outline of a trap door where the creature had been sitting.
Never putting finesse above efficiency, Belwar's hammer-hand quickly reduced
the door to rubble, and the burrow-warden looked upon the welcome sight of
familiar backpacks.
Belwar shrugged and followed the course of the logic, swiping across at the other
illithid, the one Guenhwyvar had decapitated. The headless monster fell away,
revealing another trap door.
"The drow shall find need of these," Belwar remarked when he cleared away the
chunks of broken stone and lifted out a belt that held two sheathed scimitars. He
darted for the exit and met an illithid right in the doorway.
More particularly, Belwar's humming hammer-hand met the illithid's chest. The
monster flew backward, spinning over the balcony's metal railing.
Belwar rushed out and charged to the side, having no time to check if the illithid
had somehow caught a handhold and having no time to stay and play in any
case. He could hear the commotion below, the mental attacks and the screams,
and the continuing growls of a panther that sounded like music in the burrowwarden's
ears.
His arms pinned to his sides by the illithid's unexpectedly powerful hug, Drizzt
could only twist and jerk his head about to slow the tentacles' progress. One
found a hold, then another, and began burrowing under the drow's ebony skin.
Drizzt knew little of mind flayer anatomy, but it was a bipedal creature and he
allowed himself some assumptions.
Wiggling a bit to the side, so that he was not directly facing the horrid thing, he
brought a knee slamming up into the creature's groin. By the sudden loosening of
the illithid's grip, and by the way its milky eyes seemed to widen, Drizzt guessed
that his assumptions had been correct. His knee slammed up again, then a third
time.
Drizzt heaved with all his strength and broke free of the weakened illithid's hug.
The stubborn tentacles continued their climb up the sides of Drizzt's face, though,
reaching for his brain. Explosions of burning pain racked Drizzt and he nearly
fainted, his head drooping forward limply. But the hunter would not surrender.
When Drizzt looked up again, the lire in his lavender eyes fell upon the illithid like
a damning curse. The hunter grasped the tentacles and tore them out savagely,
pulling them straight down to bow the illithid's head.
The monster fired its mind blast, but the angle was wrong and the energy did
nothing to slow the hunter. One hand held tightly to the tentacles while the other
slammed in with the frenzy of a dwarven hammer at a mithril strike on the
monster's soft head.
Blue-black bruises welled in the fleshy skin, one pupil-less eye swelled and
closed. A tentacle dug into the drow's wrist, the frantic illithid raked and punched
with its arms, but the hunter didn't notice. He pounded away at the head,
pounded the creature down to the stone floor. Drizzt tore his arm away from the
tentacle's grasp, then both fists flailed away until the illithid's eyes closed forever.
The ring of metal spun the drow about. Lying on the floor just a few feet away
was a familiar and welcome sight.
Satisfied that the scimitars had landed near his friend, Belwar charged down a
stone stairway at the nearest illithid. The monster turned and loosed its blast.
Belwar answered with a scream of sheer rage-a scream that partially blocked the
stunning effect-and he hurled himself through the air, meeting the waves of
energy head on. Though dazed from the mental assault, the deep gnome
crashed into the illithid and they fell over into a second monster that had been
rushing up to help. Belwar could hardly find his bearings, but he clearly
understood that the jumble of arms and legs all about him were not the limbs of
friend. The burrow-warden's mithril hands slashed and punched, and he
scrambled away along the second balcony in search of another stair. By the time
the two wounded illithids recovered enough to respond, the wild svirfneblin was
long gone.
Belwar caught another illithid by surprise, splatting its fleshy head flat against the
wall as he came down onto the next level. A dozen other mind flayers roamed all
about this balcony, though, most of them guarding the two stairways down to the
tower's bottom chamber. Belwar took a quick detour by springing up to the top of
the metal railing, then dropping the fifteen feet to the floor.
A blast of stunning energy rolled over Drizzt as he reached for his weapons. The
hunter resisted, though, his thoughts simply too primitive for such a sophisticated
attack form. In a single movement too quick for his latest adversary to respond
to, he snapped one scimitar from its sheath and spun about, slicing the blade at
an upward angle. The scimitar buried itself halfway through the pursuing mind
flayer's head.
The hunter knew that the monster was already dead, but he tore out the scimitar
and whacked the illithid one more time as it fell, for no particular reason at all.
Then the drow was up and running, both blades drawn, one dripping illithid blood
and the other hungry for more. Drizzt should have been looking for an escape
route-that part that was Drizzt Do'Urden would have looked- but the hunter
wanted more. His hunter-self demanded revenge on the brain mass that had
enslaved him.
A single cry saved the drow then, brought him back from the spiraling depths of
his blind, instinctive rage.
"Drizzt!" Belwar shouted, limping over to his friend. "Help me, dark elf! My ankle
twisted in the fall!" All thoughts of revenge suddenly thrown away, Drizzt
Do'Urden rushed to his svirfneblin companion's side.
Arm in arm, the two friends left the circular chamber. A moment later,
Guenhwyvar, sleek from the blood and gore of the central brain, bounded up to
join them.
"Lead us out,' Drizzt begged the panther, and Guenhwyvar willingly took up a
point position.
They ran down winding, rough-hewn corridors. "Not made by any svirfneblin,'
Belwar was quick to point out, throwing his friend a wink.
"I believe they were,' Drizzt retorted easily, returning the wink. "Under the charms
of a mind flayer, I mean,' he quickly added.
"Never!" Belwar insisted. "Never the work of a svirfneblin is this, not even if his
mind had been melted away!" In spite of their dire peril, the deep gnome
managed a belly laugh, and Drizzt joined him.
Sounds of battle sounded from the side passages of every intersection they
crossed. Guenhwyvar's keen senses kept them along the clearest route, though
the panther had no way of knowing which way was out. Still, whatever lay in any
direction could only be an improvement over the horrors they had left.
A mind flayer jumped out into their corridor just after Guenhwyvar crossed an
intersection. The creature hadn't seen the panther and faced Drizzt and Belwar
fully. Drizzt threw the svirfneblin down and dived into a headlong roll toward his
adversary, expecting to be blasted before he ever got close.
But when the drow came out of the roll and looked up, his breath came back in a
profound sigh of relief. The mind flayer lay face down on the stone, Guenhwyvar
comfortably perched atop its back.
Drizzt moved to his feline companion as Guenhwyvar casually finished the grim
business, and Belwar soon joined them.
"Anger, dark elf," the svirfneblin remarked. Drizzt looked at him curiously.
"I believe anger can fight back against their blasts,' Belwar explained. "One got
me up on the stairs, but I was so mad, I hardly noticed. Perhaps I am mistaken,
but-"
"No,' Drizzt interrupted, remembering how little he had been affected, even at
close range, when he had gone to retrieve his scimitars. He had been in the
thralls of his alter ego then, that darker, maniacal side he so desperately had
tried to leave behind. The illithid's mental assault had been all but useless
against the hunter. "You are not mistaken,' Drizzt assured his friend. "Anger can
beat them, or at least slow the effects of their mind assaults.'
Then get mad!" Belwar growled as he signaled Guenhwyvar ahead. Drizzt threw
his supporting arm back under the burrow-warden's shoulder and nodded his
agreement with Belwar's suggestion. The drow realized, though, that blind rage
such as Belwar was speaking of could not be consciously created. Instinctive
fear and anger might defeat the illithids, but Drizzt, from his experiences with his
alter ego, knew those were emotions brought on by nothing short of desperation
and panic.
The small party crossed through several more corridors, through a large, empty
room, and down yet another passage. Slowed by the limping svirfneblin, they
soon heard heavy footsteps closing in from behind.
"Too heavy for illithids,' Drizzt remarked, looking back over his shoulder.
"Slaves,' Belwar reasoned.
Fwoop! An attack sounded behind them. Fwoop! Fwoop! The sounds came to
them, followed by several thuds and groans.
"Slaves once again,' Drizzt said grimly. The pursuing foot steps came on again,
this time sounding more like a light shuffle.
"Faster!" Drizzt cried, and Belwar needed no prompting. They ran on, thankful for
every turn in the passage, for they feared that the illithids were only steps behind.
They then came into a large and high hall. Several possible exits came into view,
but one, a set of large iron doors, held their attention keenly. Between them and
the doors was a spiraling iron stairway, and on a balcony not so far above
loomed a mind flayer.
"He'll cut us off," Belwar reasoned. The footsteps came louder from behind.
Belwar looked back toward the waiting illithid curiously when he saw a wide smile
cross the drow's face. The deep gnome, too, grinned widely.
Guenhwyvar took the spiraling stairs in three mighty bounds. The illithid wisely
fled along the balcony and off into the shadows of adjoining corridors. The
panther did not pursue, but held a high, guarding position above Drizzt and
Belwar.
Both the drow and the svirfneblin called their thanks as they passed, but their
elation turned sour when they arrived at the doors. Drizzt pushed hard, but the
portals would not budge.
"Locked!" he cried.
"Not for long!" growled Belwar. The enchantment had expired in the deep
gnome's mithril hands, but he charged ahead anyway, pounding his hammerhand
against the metal.
Drizzt moved behind the deep gnome, keeping a rear guard and expecting the
illithids to enter the hall at any moment. "Hurry, Belwar:' he begged.
Both mithril hands worked furiously on the doors. Gradually, the lock began to
loosen and the doors opened just an inch. "Magga cammara, dark elf!" the
burrow-warden cried. "A bar it is that holds them! On the other side!"
"Damn!" Drizzt spat, and across the way, a group of several mind flayers entered
the hall.
Belwar didn't relent. His hammer-hand smashed at the door again and again.
The illithids crossed the stairway and Guenhwyvar sprang into their midst,
bringing the whole group tumbling down. At that horrible moment, Drizzt realized
that he did not have the onyx figurine.
The hammer-hand banged the metal in rapid succession, widening the gap
between the doors. Belwar pushed his pickaxe-hand through in an uppercut
motion and lifted the bar from its locking clasps. The doors swung wide.
"Come quickly!" the deep gnome yelled to Drizzt. He hooked his pickaxe-hand
under the drow's shoulder to pull him along, but Drizzt shrugged away the hold.
"Guenhwyvar!" Drizzt cried.
Fwoop! The evil sound came repeatedly from the pile of bodies. Guenhwyvar's
reply came as more of a helpless wail than a growl. .
Drizzt's lavender eyes burned with rage. He took a single stride back toward the
stairway before Belwar figured out a solution.
"Wait" the svirfneblin called, and he was truly relieved when Drizzt turned about
to hear him. Belwar thrust his hip toward the drow and tore open his belt pouch.
"Use this!"
Drizzt pulled out the onyx figurine and dropped it at his feet. "Be gone,
Guenhwyvar!" he shouted. "Go back to the safety of your home!"
Drizzt and Belwar couldn't even see the panther amid the throng of illithids, but
they sensed the mind flayers' sudden distress even before the telltale black mist
appeared around the onyx figurine.
As a group, the illithids spun toward them and charged.
"Get the other door!" Belwar cried. Drizzt had grabbed the figurine and was
already moving in that direction. The iron portals slammed shut and Drizzt
worked to replace the locking bar. Several clasps on the outside of the door had
been broken under the burrow-warden's ferocious assault, and the bar was bent,
but Drizzt managed to set it in place securely enough to at least slow the illithids.
"The other slaves are trapped,' Drizzt remarked.
"Goblins and gray dwarves mostly,' Belwar replied.
"And Clacker?"
Belwar threw his arms out helplessly.
"I pity them all,' groaned Drizzt, sincerely horrified at the prospect. "Nothing in all
the world can torture more than the mental clutches of mind flayers:'
"Aye, dark elf,' whispered Belwar.
The illithids slammed into the doors, and Drizzt pushed back, further securing the
lock.
"Where do we go?" Belwar asked behind him, and when Drizzt turned and
surveyed the long and narrow cavern, he certainly understood the burrowwarden's
confusion. They spotted at least a dozen exits, but between them and
every one rushed a crowd of terrified slaves or a group of illithids. Behind them
came another heavy thud, and the doors creaked open several inches.
"Just go!" Drizzt shouted, pushing Belwar along. They charged down a wide
stairway, then out across the broken floor, picking a route that would get them as
far from the stone castle as possible.
"Ware danger on all sides!" Belwar cried. "Slave and flayer alike!"
"Let them beware!" Drizzt retorted, his scimitars leading the way. He slammed a
goblin down with the hilt of one blade as it stumbled into his way, and a moment
later, sliced the tentacles from the face of an illithid as it began to suck the brain
from a recaptured duergar.
Then another former slave, a bigger one, jumped in front of Drizzt. The drow
rushed it headlong, but this time he stayed his scimitars.
"Clacker!" Belwar yelled behind Drizzt.
"B-b-back of . . . the. . . cavern,' the hook horror panted, its grumbled words
barely decipherable. "The b.b.best exit:'
"Lead on,' Belwar replied excitedly, his hopes returning. Nothing would stand
against the three of them united. When the burrow-warden started after his giant
hook horror friend, however, he noticed that Drizzt wasn't following. At first
Belwar feared that a mind blast had caught the drow, but when he returned to
Drizzt's side, he realized otherwise.
Atop another of the many wide stairways that ran through the many-tiered
cavern, a single slender figure moved through a group of slaves and illithids
alike.
"By the gods,' Belwar muttered in disbelief, for the devastating movements of this
single figure truly frightened the deep gnome.
The precise cuts and deft twists of the twin swords were not at all frightening to
Drizzt Do'Urden. Indeed, to the young dark elf, they rang with a familiarity that
brought an old ache to his heart. He looked at Belwar blankly and spoke the
name of the single warrior who could fit those maneuvers, the only name that
could accompany such magnificent swordplay.
"Zaknafein:'
CHAPTER 20
FATHER, MY FATHER
How many lies had Matron Malice told him? What truth could Drizzt ever find in
the web of deceptions that marked drow society? His father had not been
sacrificed to the Spider Queen! Zaknafein was here, fighting before him, wielding
his swords as finely as Drizzt had ever seen.
"What is it?" Belwar demanded.
"The drow warrior,' Drizzt was barely able to whisper.
"From your city, dark elf?'" Belwar asked. "Sent after you?"
"From Menzoberranzan,' Drizzt replied. Belwar waited for more information, but
Drizzt was too enthralled by Zak's appearance to go into much detail.
"We must go,' the burrow-warden said at length.
"Quickly,' agreed Clacker, returning to his friends. The hook horror's voice
sounded more controlled now, as though the mere appearance of Clacker's
friends had aided his pech side in its continuing internal struggle. "The mind
flayers are organizing defenses. Many slaves are down:'
Drizzt spun out of the reach of Belwar's pick-hand. "No,' he said firmly. "I'll not
leave him!"
"Magga cammara, dark elf!" Belwar shouted at him. "Who is it?"
"Zaknafein Do'Urden,' Drizzt yelled back, more than matching the burrowwarden's
rising ire. Drizzt's volume dropped considerably as he finished the
thought, though, and he nearly choked on the words, "My father.'
By the time Belwar and Clacker exchanged disbelieving stares, Drizzt was gone,
running to and then up the wide stairway. Atop it, the spirit-wraith stood among a
mound of victims, mind flayers and slaves alike, who had found the great
misfortune of getting in his way. Farther along the higher tier, several illithids had
taken flight from the undead monster.
Zaknafein started to pursue them, for they were running toward the stone castle,
following the course the spirit-wraith had determined from the beginning. A
thousand magical alarms sounded within the spirit-wraith, though, and abruptly
turned him back to the stair.
Drizzt was coming. Zin-carla's moment of fulfillment, the purpose of Zaknafein's
animation, at last had arrived!
"Weapon master!" Drizzt cried, springing up lightly to stand by his father's side.
The younger drow bubbled with elation, not realizing the truth of the monster
standing before him. When Drizzt got near Zak, though, he sensed that
something was wrong. Perhaps it was the strange light in the spirit-wraith's eyes
that slowed Drizzt's rush. Perhaps it was the fact that Zaknafein did not return his
joyful call.
A moment later, it was the downward slice of a sword.
Drizzt somehow managed to get a blocking scimitar up in time. Confused, he still
believed that Zaknafein simply had not recognized him.
"Father!" he shouted. "I am Drizzt!"
One sword dived ahead, while the second started in a wide slice, then rushed
suddenly toward Drizzt's side. Matching the spirit -wraith's speed, Drizzt came
down with one scimitar to parry the first attack and sliced across with the other to
foil the second.
"Who are you?" Drizzt demanded desperately, furiously.
A flurry of blows came straight in. Drizzt worked frantically to keep them at bay,
but then Zaknafein came across with a backhand and managed to sweep both of
Drizzt's blades out to the same side. The spirit-wraith's second sword followed
closely, a cut aimed straight at Drizzt's heart, one that Drizzt could not possibly
block.
Back down at the bottom of the stairway, Belwar and Clacker cried out, thinking
their friend doomed.
Zaknafein's moment of victory was stolen from him, though, by the instincts of
the hunter. Drizzt sprang to the side ahead of the plunging blade, then twisted
and ducked under Zaknafein's deadly cut. The sword nicked him under his
jawbone, leaving a painful gash. When Drizzt completed his roll and found his
footing despite the angles of the stair, he showed no sign of acknowledging the
injury. When Drizzt again faced his father's imposter, simmering fires burned in
his lavender eyes.
Drizzt's agility amazed even his friends, who had seen him before in battle.
Zaknafein rushed out immediately after completing his swing, but Drizzt was up
and ready before the spirit-wraith caught up to him.
"Who are you?" Drizzt demanded again. This time his voice was deathly calm.
"What are you?"
The spirit-wraith snarled and charged recklessly. Believing beyond any doubt that
this was not Zaknafein, Drizzt did not miss the opening. He rushed back toward
his original position, knocked a sword aside, and slipped a scimitar through as he
passed his charging adversary. Drizzt's blade cut through the fine mesh armor
and dug deeply into Zaknafein's lung, a wound that would have stopped any
mortal opponent.
But Zaknafein did not stop. The spirit-wraith did not draw breath and did not feel
pain. Zak turned back on Drizzt and flashed a smile so evil that it would have
made Matron Malice stand up and applaud.
Back now on the top step of the stairway, Drizzt stood wide-eyed in amazement.
He saw the gruesome wound and saw, against all possibility, Zaknafein steadily
advancing, not even flinching.
"Get away" Belwar cried from the bottom of the stairs. An ogre rushed at the
deep gnome, but Clacker intercepted and immediately crushed the thing's head
in a claw.
"We must leave,' Clacker said to Belwar, the clarity of his voice turning the
burrow-warden on his heel.
Belwar could see it clearly in the hook horror's eyes, in that critical moment,
Clacker was more a pech than he had been since before the wizard's polymorph
spell. "The stones tell me of illithids gathering within the castle,' Clacker
explained, and the deep gnome was not surprised that Clacker had heard the
voices of the stones. "The illithids will rush out soon,' Clacker continued, "to the
certain demise of every slave left in the cavern'"
Belwar did not doubt a word of it, but to the svirfneblin, loyalty far outweighed
personal safety. "We cannot leave the drow,' he replied through clenched teeth.
Clacker nodded in full agreement and charged out to chase away a group of gray
dwarves that had come too close.
"Run, dark elf!" Belwar cried. "We have no time!" Drizzt didn't hear his svirfneblin
friend. He focused on the approaching weapon master, the monster
impersonating his father, even as Zaknafein focused on him. Of all the many
evils perpetrated by Matron Malice, none, by Drizzt's estimation, were greater
than this abomination. Malice somehow had perverted the one thing in Drizzt's
world that had given him pleasure. Drizzt had believed Zaknafein dead, and that
thought was painful enough.
But now this.
It was more than the young drow could bear. He wanted to fight this monster with
all his heart and soul, and the spirit-wraith, created for no other reason than this
very battle, wholly concurred.
Neither noticed the illithid descending from the darkness above, farther back on
the platform, behind Zaknafein.
"Come, monster of Matron Malice,' Drizzt growled, sliding his weapons together.
"Come and feel my blades.'
Zaknafein paused only a few steps away and flashed his wicked smile again. The
swords came up and the spirit-wraith took another step.
Fwoop!
The illithid's blast rolled over both of them. Zaknafein remained unaffected, but
Drizzt caught the force fully. Darkness rolled over him, his eyelids drooped with
undeniable weight. He heard his scimitars fall to the stone, but he was beyond
any other comprehension. Zaknafein snarled in gleeful victory, banged his
swords together, and stepped toward the falling drow.
Belwar screamed, but it was Clacker's monstrous cry of protest that sounded
loudest, rising above the din of the battle-filled cavern. Everything Clacker had
ever known as a pech rushed back to him when he saw the drow who had
befriended him fall, doomed. That pech identity surged back more keenly,
perhaps, than Clacker had even known in his former life.
Zaknafein lunged, seeing his helpless victim in range, but then smashed
headfirst into a stone wall that had appeared from nothingness. The spirit-wraith
bounced back, his eyes wide in frustration. He clawed at the wall and pounded
on it, but it was quite real and sturdy. The stone blocked Zaknafein fully from the
stairway and his intended prey.
Back down the stairway, Belwar turned his stunned gaze on Clacker. The
svirfneblin had heard that some pech could conjure such stone walls. "Did you. . .
?" the burrow-warden gasped.
The pech in a hook horror's body did not pause long enough to answer. Clacker
leaped the stairs four at a stride and gently hoisted Drizzt in his huge arms. He
even thought to retrieve the drow's scimitars, then came pounding back down the
flight.
"Run" Clacker commanded the burrow-warden. "For all of your life, run, Belwar
Dissengulp!"
The deep gnome, scratching his head with his pickaxe-hand, did indeed run.
Clacker cleared a wide path to the cavern's rear exit-none dared stand before his
enraged charge-and the burrow-warden, with his short svirfneblin legs, one of
which was sprained, had a difficult time keeping up.
Back up the stairs, behind the wall, Zaknafein could only assume that the floating
illithid, the same one that had blasted Drizzt, had blocked his charge. Zaknafein
whirled about on the monster and screamed in sheer hatred.
Fwoop! Another blast came.
Zaknafein leaped up and sliced off both of the illithid's feet with a single stroke.
The illithid levitated higher, sending mental cries of anguish and distress to its
companions.
Zaknafein couldn't reach the thing, and with other illithids rushing in from every
angle, the spirit-wraith didn't have time to enact his own levitation spell.
Zaknafein blamed this illithid for his failure, he would not let it escape. He hurled
a sword as precisely as any spear.
The illithid looked down at Zaknafein in disbelief, then to the blade buried half to
the hilt in its chest and knew that its life was at an end.
Mind flayers rushed toward Zaknafein, firing their stunning blasts as they came.
The spirit-wraith had only one sword remaining, but he smashed his opponents
down anyway, venting his frustrations on their ugly octopus heads.
Drizzt had escaped. . . for now.
CHAPTER 21
LOST AND FOUND
"Praise Lloth," Matron Malice stammered, sensing the distant elation of
her spirit-wraith. "He has Drizzt!" The matron mother snapped her gaze to one
side, then the other, and her three daughters backed away at the sheer power of
the emotions contorting her visage.
"Zaknafein has found your brother!"
Maya and Vierna smiled at each other, glad that this whole ordeal might finally be
coming to a conclusion. Since the enactment of Zin-carla, the normal and
necessary routines of House Do'Urden had virtually ceased, and every day their
nervous mother had turned further and further inward, absorbed by the spiritwraith's
hunt.
Across the anteroom, Briza's smile would have shown a different light to any who
took the time to notice, an almost disappointed light.
Fortunately for the first-born daughter, Matron Malice was too absorbed by
distant events to take note. The matron mother fell deeper into her meditative
trance, savoring every morsel of rage the spirit-wraith threw out, in the
knowledge that her blasphemous son was on the receiving end of that anger.
Malice's breathing came in excited gasps as Zaknafein and Drizzt played through
their sword fight, then the matron mother nearly lost her breath altogether.
Something had stopped Zaknafein.
"No!" Malice screamed, leaping out of her decorated throne. She glanced
around, looking for someone to strike or something to throw. "No!" she cried
again. "It cannot be!"
"Drizzt has escaped?" Briza asked, trying to keep the smugness out of her voice.
Malice's subsequent glare told Briza that her tone might have revealed too much
of her thoughts.
"Is the spirit-wraith destroyed?" Maya cried in sincere distress.
"Not destroyed, Malice replied, an obvious tremor in her usually firm voice. "But
once more, your brother runs free!"
"Zin-carla has not yet failed,' Vierna reasoned, trying to console her excited
mother.
"The spirit-wraith is very close,' Maya added, picking up Vierna's cue.
Malice dropped back into her seat and wiped the sweat out of her eyes. "Leave
me," she commanded her daughters, not wanting them to observe her in such a
sorry state. Zin-carla was stealing her life away, Malice knew, for every thought,
every hope, of her existence hinged on the spirit-wraith's success.
When the others had gone, Malice lit a candle and took out a tiny, precious
mirror. What a wretched thing she had become in the last few weeks. She had
hardly eaten, and deep lines of worry creased her formerly glass-smooth, ebony
skin. By appearances, Matron Malice had aged more in the last few weeks than
in the century before that. "I will become as Matron Baenre,' she whispered in
disgust, "withered and ugly:' For perhaps the very first time in her long life, Malice
began to wonder of the value of her continual quest for power and the merciless
Spider Queen's favor. The thoughts disappeared as quickly as they had come,
though. Matron Malice had gone too far for such silly regrets. By her strength and
devotion, Malice had taken her house to the status of a ruling family and had
secured a seat for herself on the prestigious ruling council.
She remained on the verge of despair, though, nearly broken by the strains of the
last years. Again she wiped the sweat from her eyes and looked into the little
mirror.
What a wretched thing she had become.
Drizzt had done this to her, she reminded herself. Her youngest son's actions
had angered the Spider Queen, his sacrilege had put Malice on the edge of
doom.
"Get him, my spirit-wraith,' Malice whispered with a sneer. At that moment of
anger, she hardly cared what future the Spider Queen would layout for her.
More than anything else in all the world, Matron Malice Do'Urden wanted Drizzt
dead.
They ran through the winding tunnels blindly, hoping that no monsters would rear
up suddenly before them. With the danger so very real at their backs, the three
companions could not afford the usual caution.
Hours passed and still they ran. Belwar, older than his friends and with little legs
working two strides for every one of Drizzt's and three strides for each of
Clacker's, tired first, but that didn't slow the group. Clacker hoisted the burrowwarden
onto a shoulder and ran on.
How many miles they had covered they could not know when they at last broke
for their first rest. Drizzt, silent and melancholy through all the trek, took up a
guard position at the entrance to the small alcove they had chosen as a
temporary camp. Recognizing his drow friend's deep pain, Belwar moved over to
offer comfort.
"Not what you expected, dark elf?" the burrow-warden asked softly. With no
answer forthcoming, but with Drizzt obviously needing to talk, Belwar pressed on.
"The drow in the cavern you knew. Did you claim that he was your father?"
Drizzt snapped an angry glare on the svirfneblin, but his visage softened
considerably when he took the moment to realize Belwar's concern.
"Zaknafein,' Drizzt explained. "Zaknafein Do'Urden, my father and mentor. It was
he who trained me with the blade and who instructed me in all my life. Zaknafein
was my only friend in Menzoberranzan, the only drow I have ever known who
shared my beliefs:'
"He meant to kill you,' Belwar stated flatly. Drizzt winced, and the burrow-warden
quickly tried to offer him some hope. "Did he not recognize you, perhaps?"
"He was my father,' Drizzt said again, "my closest companion for two decades:'
"Then why, dark elf?"
"That was not Zaknafein,' replied Drizzt. "Zaknafein is dead, sacrificed by my
mother to the Spider Queen:'
"Magga cammara,' Belwar whispered, horrified at the revelation concerning
Drizzt's parents. The straightforwardness with which Drizzt explained the heinous
deed led the burrow-warden to believe that Malice's sacrifice was not so very
unusual in the drow city. A shudder coursed through Belwar's spine, but he
sublimated his revulsion for the sake of his tormented friend.
"I do not yet know what monster Matron Malice has put in Zaknafein's guise,'
Drizzt went on, not even noticing Belwar's discomfort.
"A formidable foe, whatever it may be,' the deep gnome remarked.
That was exactly what troubled Drizzt. The drow warrior he had battled in the
illithid cavern moved with the precision and unmistakable style of Zaknafein
Do'Urden.
Drizzt's rationale could deny that Zaknafein would turn against him, but his heart
told him that the monster he had crossed swords with was indeed his father.
"How did it end?" Drizzt asked after a long pause.
Belwar looked at him curiously.
"The fight,' Drizzt explained. "I remember the illithid but nothing more:'
Belwar shrugged and looked to Clacker. " Ask him,' the burrow-warden replied.
"A stone wall appeared between you and your enemies, but how it got there I can
only guess:'
Clacker heard the conversation and moved over to his friends. "I put it there," he
said, his voice still perfectly clear.
"Powers of a pech?" Belwar asked. The deep gnome knew the reputation of pech
powers with the stone, but not in enough detail to fully understand what Clacker
had done.
"We are a peaceful race,' Clacker began, realizing that this might be his only
chance to tell his friends of his people. He remained more pechlike than he had
since the polymorph, but already he felt the base urges of a hook horror creeping
back in. "We desire only to work the stone. It is our calling and our love. And with
this symbiosis with the earth comes a measure of power. The stones speak to us
and aid us in our toils:'
Drizzt looked wryly at Belwar. "Like the earth elemental you once raised against
me:'
Belwar snorted an embarrassed laugh.
"No,' Clacker said soberly, determined not to get sidetracked. "Deep gnomes,
too, can call upon the powers of the earth, but theirs is a different relationship.
The svirfnebli's love of the earth is only one of their varied definitions of
happiness:' Clacker looked away from his companions, to the rock wall. "Pech
are brothers with the earth. It aids us as we aid it, out of affection:'
"You speak of the earth as though it is some sentient being,' Drizzt remarked, not
sarcastically, just out of curiosity.
"It is, dark elf,' replied Belwar, imagining Clacker as he must have appeared
before his encounter with the wizard, "for those who can hear it:'
Clacker's huge beaked head nodded in accord.
"Svirfnebli can hear the earth's distant song, he said. "Pech can speak to it
directly:'
This was all quite beyond Drizzt's understanding. He knew the sincerity in his
companions' words, but drow elves were not nearly as connected to the rocks of
the Underdark as the svirfnebli and the pech. Still, if Drizzt needed any proof of
what Belwar and Clacker were hinting at, he had only to recall his battle against
Belwar's earth elemental that decade ago, or imagine the wall that had somehow
appeared out of nowhere to block his enemies in the illithid cavern.
"What do the stones tell you now?" Drizzt asked Clacker. "Have we outdistanced
our enemies?"
Clacker moved over and put his ear to the wall. "The words are vague now,' he
said with obvious lament in his voice. His companions understood the
connotation of his tone. The earth was speaking no less clearly, it was Clacker's
hearing, impeded by the impending return of the hook horror, that had begun to
fade.
"I hear no others in pursuit,' Clacker went on, "but I am not so sure as to trust my
ears:' He snarled suddenly, spun away, and walked back to the far side of the
alcove.
Drizzt and Belwar exchanged concerned looks, then moved to follow.
"What is it?" the burrow-warden dared to ask the hook horror, though he could
guess readily enough.
"I am falling,' Clacker replied, and the grating that had returned to his voice only
emphasized the point. "In the illithid cavern, I was pech-more pech than ever
before. I was pech in narrow focus. I was the earth.' Belwar and Drizzt seemed
not to understand.
"The wow-wall,' Clacker tried to explain. "Bringing up such a wall is a task that
only a g-g-group of pech elders could accomplish, working together through
painstaking rituals:' Clacker paused and shook his head violently, as though he
was trying to throw out the hook horror side. He slammed a heavy claw into the
wall and forced himself to continue. "Yet I did it. I became the stone and merely
lifted my hand to block Drizzt's enemies!"
"And now it is leaving,' Drizzt said softly. "The pech is falling away from your
grasp once again, buried under the instincts of a hook horror:'
Clacker looked away and again banged a hook against the wall in reply.
Something in the motion brought him comfort, and he repeated it, over and over,
rhythmically tapping as if trying to hold on to a piece of his former self.
Drizzt and Belwar walked out of the alcove and back into the corridor to give their
giant friend his privacy. A short time later, they noticed that the tapping had
ceased, and Clacker stuck his head out, his huge, birdlike eyes filled with sorrow.
His stuttered words sent shivers through the spines of his friends, for they found
that they could not deny his logic or his desire.
"P-please k-k-kill me!'
PART 5
SPIRIT
Spirit. It cannot be broken and it cannot be stolen away. A victim in the throes of
despair might feel otherwise, and certainly the victim's "master" would like to
believe it so. But in truth, the spirit remains, sometimes buried but never fully
removed.
That is the false assumption of Zin-carla and the danger of such sentient
animation. The priestesses, I have come to learn, claim it as the highest gift of
the Spider Queen deity who rules the drow. I think not. Better to call Zin-carla
Lloth's greatest lie.
The physical powers of the body cannot be separated from the rationale of the
mind and the emotions of the heart. They are one and the same, a compilation of
a singular being. It is in the harmony of these three-body, mind, and heart-that
we find spirit.
How many tyrants have tried? How many rulers have sought to reduce their
subjects to simple, unthinking instruments of profit and gain? They steal the
loves, the religions, of their people, they seek to steal the spirit.
Ultimately and inevitably, they fail. This I must believe. If the flame of the spirit's
candle is extinguished, there is only death, and the tyrant finds no gain in a
kingdom littered with corpses.
But it is a resilient thing, this flame of spirit, indomitable and ever-striving. In
some, at least, it will survive, to the tyrant's demise.
Where, then, was Zaknafein, my father, when he set out purposefully to destroy
me? Where was I in my years alone in the wilds, when this hunter that I had
become blinded my heart and guided my sword hand often against my conscious
wishes?
We both were there all along, I came to know, buried but never stolen.
Spirit. In every language in all the Realms, surface and Underdark, in every time
and every place, the word has a ring of strength and determination. It is the
hero's strength, the mother's resilience, and the poor man's arm. It cannot be
broken, and it cannot be taken away.
This I must believe.
-Drizzt Do'Urden
CHAPTER 22
WITHOUT DIRECTION
The sword cut carne too swiftly for the goblin slave to even cry out in terror. It
toppled forward, quite dead before it ever hit the floor. Zaknafein stepped on its
back and continued on, the path to the narrow cavern's rear exit lay open before
the spirit-wraith, barely ten yards away. Even as the undead warrior moved
beyond his latest kill, a group of illithids carne into the cavern in front of him.
Zaknafein snarled and did not turn away or slow in the least. His logic and his
strides were direct, Drizzt had gone through this exit, and he would follow.
Anything in his way would fall to his blade.
Let this one go on its way! came a telepathic cry from several points in the
cavern, from other mind flayers who had witnessed Zaknafein in action. You
cannot defeat him! Let the drow leave! The mind flayers had seen enough of the
spirit-wraith's deadly blades, more than a dozen of their comrades had died at
Zaknafein's hand already.
This new group standing in Zaknafein's way did not miss the urgency of the
telepathic pleas. They parted to either side with all speed-except for one.
The illithid race based its existence on pragmatism founded in vast volumes of
communal knowledge. Mind flayers considered base emotions such as pride fatal
flaws.
It proved to be true again on this occasion.
Fwoop! The single illithid blasted the spirit-wraith, determined that none should
be allowed to escape.
An instant later, the time of a single, precise swipe of a sword, Zaknafein stepped
on the fallen illithid's chest and continued on his way out into the wilds of the
Underdark.
No other illithids made any move to stop him.
Zaknafein crouched and carefully picked his path. Drizzt had traveled down this
tunnel, the scent was fresh and clear. Even so, in his careful pursuit, where he
would often have to pause and check the trail, Zaknafein could not move as
swiftly as his intended prey.
But, unlike Zaknafein, Drizzt had to rest.
"Hold" The tone of Belwar's command left no room for debate. Drizzt and Clacker
froze in their tracks, wondering what had put the burrow-warden on sudden alert.
Belwar moved over and put his ear to the rock wall. "Boots,' he whispered,
pointing to the stone. "Parallel tunnel:'
Drizzt joined his friend by the wall and listened intently, but, though his senses
were keener than almost any other dark elf, he was not nearly as adept at
reading the vibrations of the stone as the deep gnome.
"How many?" he asked.
"A few,' replied Belwar, but his shrug told Drizzt that he was only making a
hopeful approximation.
"Seven,' said Clacker from a few paces down the wall, his voice clear and sure.
"Duergar-gray dwarves-fleeing from the illithids, as are we:'
"How can you...' Drizzt started to ask, but he stopped, remembering what Clacker
had told him concerning the powers of the pech.
"Do the tunnels cross?" Belwar asked the hook horror. "Can we avoid the
duergar?"
Clacker turned back to the stone for the answers. "The tunnels join a short way
ahead,' he replied, "then continue on as one:'
"Then if we stay here, the gray dwarves will probably pass us by,' Belwar
reasoned.
Drizzt was not so certain of the deep gnome's reasoning. "We and the duergar
share a common enemy,' Drizzt remarked, then his eyes widened as a thought
came to him suddenly. "Allies?"
"Although often the duergar and drow travel together, gray dwarves do not
usually ally with svirfnebli,' Belwar reminded him. "Or hook horrors, I would
guess!"
"This situation is far from usual,' Drizzt was quick to retort. "If the duergar are in
flight from the mind flayers, then they are probably ill-equipped and unarmed.
They might welcome such an alliance, to the gain of both groups:'
"I do not believe they will be as friendly as you assume,' Belwar replied with a
sarcastic snicker, "but concede I will that this narrow tunnel is not a defensible
region, more suited to the size of a duergar than to the long blades of a drow and
the longer-still arms of a hook horror. If the duergar double back at the crossroad
and head toward us, we may have to do battle in an area that will favor them:'
"Then to the place where the tunnels join,' said Drizzt, "and let us learn what we
may:'
The three companions soon came into a small, oval-shaped chamber. Another
tunnel, the one in which the duergar were traveling, entered the area right beside
the companions' tunnel, and a third passage ran out from the back of the room.
The friends moved across into the shadows of this farthest tunnel even as the
shuffling of boots echoed in their ears.
A moment later, the seven duergar came into the oval chamber. They were
haggard, as Drizzt had suspected, but they were not unarmed. Three carried
clubs, another a dagger, two held swords, and the last sported two large rocks.
Drizzt held his friends back and stepped out to meet the strangers. Though
neither race held much love for the other, drow and duergar often formed
mutually gainful alliances. Drizzt guessed that the chances of forming a peaceful
alliance would be greater if he went out alone.
His sudden appearance startled the weary gray dwarves. They rushed all about
frantically, trying to form some defensive posture. Swords and clubs came up at
the ready, and the dwarf holding the rocks cocked his arm back for a throw.
"Greetings, duergar,' Drizzt said, hoping that the gray dwarves would understand
the drow tongue. His hands rested easily on the hilts of his sheathed scimitars,
he knew he could get to them quickly enough if he needed them.
"Who might ye be?" one of the sword-wielding gray dwarves asked in shaky but
understandable drow.
"A refugee, as yourselves,' replied Drizzt, "fleeing from the slavery of the cruel
mind flayers:'
"Then ye know our hurry,' snarled the duergar, "so be standin' outa our way!"
"I offer to you an alliance,' said Drizzt. "Surely greater numbers will only aid us
when the illithids come.'
"Seven's as good as eight,' the duergar stubbornly replied. Behind the speaker,
the rock thrower pumped his arm threateningly.
"But not as good as ten,' Drizzt reasoned calmly.
"Ye got friends?" asked the duergar, his tone noticeably softening. He glanced
about nervously, looking for a possible ambush. "More drow?"
"Hardly,' Drizzt answered.
"I seen him!" cried another of the group, also in the drow tongue, before Drizzt
could begin to explain. "He runned out with the beaked monster an' the
svirfneblin!"
"Deep gnome!" The leader of the duergar spat at Drizzt's feet. "Not a friend of the
duergar or the drow!"
Drizzt would have been willing to let the failed offer go at that, with he and his
friends moving on their way and the gray dwarves going their own. But the wellearned
reputation of the duergar labeled them as neither peaceful nor overly
intelligent. With the illithids not far behind, this band of gray dwarves hardly
needed more enemies.
A rock sailed at Drizzt's head. A scimitar flashed out and deflected it harmlessly
aside.
"Bivrip!" came the burrow-warden's cry from the tunnel. Belwar and Clacker
rushed out, not surprised in the least by the sudden turn of events. In the drow
Academy, Drizzt, like all dark elves, had spent months learning the ways and
tricks of the gray dwarves. That training saved him now, for he was the first to
strike, lining all seven of his diminutive opponents in the harmless purple flames
of faerie fire.
Almost at the same time, three of the duergar faded from view, exercising their
innate talents of invisibility. The purple flames remained, though, clearly outlining
the disappearing dwarves.
A second rock flew through the air, slamming into Clacker's chest. The armored
monster would have smiled at the pitiful attack if a beak could smile, and Clacker
continued his charge straight ahead into the duergar's midst.
The rock thrower and the dagger wielder fled out of the hook horror's way, having
no weapons that could possibly hurt the armored giant. With other foes readily
available,
Clacker let them go. They came around the side of the chamber, bearing straight
in at Belwar, thinking the svirfneblin the easiest of the targets.
The swipe of a pickaxe abruptly stopped their charge. The unarmed
duergar lunged forward, trying to grab the arm before it could launch a
backswing. Belwar anticipated the attempt and crossed over with his hammerhand,
slamming the duergar squarely in the face. Sparks flew, bones crumbled,
and gray skin burned and splattered. The duergar flew to his back and writhed
about frantically, clutching his broken face.
The dagger wielder was not so anxious anymore.
Two invisible duergar came at Drizzt. With the outline of purple flames, Drizzt
could see their general movement, and he had prudently marked these two as
the sword-wielders. But Drizzt was at a clear disadvantage, for he could not
distinguish subtle thrusts and cuts. He backed away, putting distance between
himself and his companions.
He sensed an attack and threw out a blocking scimitar, smiling at his luck when
he heard the ring of weapons. The gray dwarf came into view for just a moment,
to show
Drizzt his wicked smile, then faded quickly away.
"How many does ye think ye can block?" the other invisible duergar asked
smugly.
"More than you, I suspect,' Drizzt replied, and then it was the drow's turn to smile.
His enchanted globe of absolute darkness descended over all three of the
combatants, stealing the duergar advantage.
In the wild rush of the battle, Clacker's savage hook horror instincts took full
control of his actions. The giant did not understand the significance of the empty
purple flames that marked the third invisible duergar, and he charged instead at
the two remaining gray dwarves, both holding clubs.
Before the hook horror ever got there, a club smashed into his knee, and the
invisible duergar chuckled in glee. The other two began to fade from sight, but
Clacker now paid them no heed. The invisible club struck again, this time
smashing into the hook horror's thigh.
Possessed by the instincts of a race that had never been concerned with finesse,
the hook horror howled and fell forward, burying the purple flames under his
massive chest. Clacker hopped and dropped several times, until he was satisfied
that the unseen enemy was crushed to death.
But then a flurry of clubbing blows rained down upon the back of the hook
horror's head. The dagger-wielding duergar was no novice to battle. His attacks
came in measured thrusts, forcing Belwar, wielding heavier weapons, to take the
initiative. Deep gnomes hated duergar as profoundly as duergar hated deep
gnomes, but Belwar was no fool. His pickaxe waved about only to keep his
opponent at bay, while his hammer-hand remained cocked and ready.
Thus, the two sparred without gain for several moments, both content to let the
other make the first error. When the hook horror cried out in pain, and with Drizzt
out of sight, Belwar was forced to act. He stumbled forward, feigning a trip, and
lurched ahead with his hammer-hand as his pickaxe dipped low.
The duergar recognized the ploy, but could not ignore the obvious opening in the
svirfneblin's defense. The dagger came in over the pickaxe, diving straight at
Belwar's throat.
The burrow-warden threw himself backward with equal speed and lifted a leg as
he went, his boot clipping the duergar's chin. The gray dwarf kept corning,
though, diving down atop the falling deep gnome, his dagger's point leading the
way.
Belwar got his pickaxe up only a split second before the jagged weapon found his
throat. The burrow-warden managed to move the duergar's arm out wide, but the
gray dwarf's considerable weight pressed them together, their faces barely an
inch apart.
"Got ye now!" the duergar cried.
"Get this!" Belwar snarled back, and he freed up his hammer-hand enough to
launch a short but heavy punch into the duergar's ribs. The duergar slammed his
forehead into
Belwar's face, and Belwar bit him on the nose in response. The two rolled about,
spitting and snarling, and using whatever weapons they could find.
By the sound of ringing blades, any observers outside Drizzt's darkness globe
would have sworn that a dozen warriors battled within. The frenzied tempo of
swordplay was solely the doing of Drizzt Do'Urden. In such a situation, fighting
blindly, the drow reasoned that the best battle method would be to keep all the
blades as far away from his body as possible. His scimitars charged out
relentlessly and in perfect harmony, pressing the two gray dwarves back on their
heels.
Each arm worked its own opponent, keeping the gray dwarves rooted in place
squarely in front of Drizzt. If one of his enemies managed to get around to his
side, the drow knew, he would be in serious trouble.
Each scimitar swipe brought a ring of metal, and each passing second gave
Drizzt more understanding of his opponents' abilities and attack strategies. Out in
the Underdark, Drizzt had fought blindly many times, once even donning a hood
against the basilisk he'd met.
Overwhelmed by the sheer speed of the drow's attacks, the duergar could only
work their swords back and forth and hope that a scimitar didn't slide through.
The blades sang and rang as the two duergar frantically parried and dodged.
Then came a sound that Drizzt had hoped for, the sound of a scimitar digging
into flesh. A moment later, one sword clanged to the stone and its wounded
wielder made the fatal mistake of crying out in pain.
Drizzt's hunter-self rose to the surface at that moment and focused on that cry,
and his scimitar shot straight ahead, smashing into the gray dwarf's teeth and on
through the back of its head.
The hunter turned on the remaining duergar in fury. Around and around his
blades spun in swirling circular motions. Around and around, then one shot out in
a sudden straightforward thrust, too quickly for a blocking response. It caught the
duergar in the shoulder, gashing a deep wound.
"Give! Give!" the gray dwarf cried, not desiring the same fate as its companion.
Drizzt heard another sword drop to the floor. "Please, drow elf!"
At the duergar's words, the drow buried his instinctive urges. "I accept your
surrender,' Drizzt replied, and he moved close to his opponent, putting the tip of
his scimitar to the gray dwarf's chest. Together, they walked out of the area
darkened by Drizzt's spell.
Searing agony ripped through Clacker's head, every blow sending waves of pain.
The hook horror gurgled out an animal's growl and exploded into furious motion,
heaving up from the crushed duergar and spinning over at the newest foes.
A duergar club smashed in again, but Clacker was beyond any sensation of pain.
A heavy claw bashed through the purple outline, through the invisible duergar's
skull. The gray dwarf came back into view suddenly, the concentration needed to
maintain a state of invisibility stolen by death, the greatest thief of all.
The remaining duergar turned to flee, but the enraged hook horror moved faster.
Clacker caught the gray dwarf in a claw and hoisted him into the air. Screeching
like a frenzied bird, the hook horror hurled the unseen opponent into the wall.
The duergar came back into sight, broken and crumbled at the base of the stone
wall.
No opponents stood to face the hook horror, but Clacker's savage hunger was far
from satiated. Drizzt and the wounded duergar emerged from the darkness then,
and the hook horror barreled in.
With the specter of Belwar's combat taking his attention, Drizzt did not realize
Clacker's intent until the duergar prisoner screamed in terror. By then, it was too
late.
Drizzt watched his prisoner's head go flying back into the globe of darkness.
"Clacker!" the drow screamed in protest. Then Drizzt ducked and dived backward
for his own life as the other claw came viciously swinging across. Spotting new
prey nearby, the hook horror didn't follow the drow into the globe. Belwar and the
dagger-wielding duergar were too engaged in their own struggles to notice the
approaching crazed giant. Clacker bent low, collected the prone combatants in
his huge arms, and heaved them both straight up into the air. The duergar had
the misfortune of corning down first, and Clacker promptly batted it across the
chamber. Belwar would have found a similar fate, but crossed scimitars
intercepted the hook horror's next blow.
The giant's strength slid Drizzt back several feet, but the parry softened the blow
enough for Belwar to fall by. Still, the burrow-warden crashed heavily into the
floor and spent a long moment too dazed to react.
"Clacker!" Drizzt cried again, as a giant foot came up with the obvious intent of
squashing Belwar flat. Needing all his speed and agility, Drizzt dived around to
the back of the hook horror, dropped to the floor, and went for Clacker's knees,
as he had in their first encounter. Trying to stomp on the prone svirfneblin,
Clacker was already a bit off balance, and Drizzt easily tripped him to the stone.
In the blink of an eye, the drow warrior sprang atop the monster's chest and
slipped a scimitar tip between the armored folds of Clacker's neck.
Drizzt dodged a clumsy swing as Clacker continued to struggle. The drow hated
what he had to do, but then the hook horror calmed suddenly and looked up at
him with sincere understanding.
"D-d-do . . . it,' came a garbled demand. Drizzt, horrified, glanced over to Belwar
for support. Back on his feet, the burrow-warden just looked away.
"Clacker?" Drizzt asked the hook horror." Are you Clacker once again?"
The monster hesitated, then the beaked head nodded slightly.
Drizzt sprang away and looked at the carnage in the chamber. "Let us leave,' he
said.
Clacker remained prone a moment longer, considering the grim implications of
his reprieve. With the battle's conclusion, the hook horror side backed out of its
full control of Clacker's consciousness. Those savage instincts lurked, Clacker
knew, not far from the surface, waiting for another opportunity to find a firm hold.
How many times would the faltering pech side be able to fight those instincts?
Clacker slammed the stone, a mighty blow that sent cracks running through the
chamber's floor. With great effort, the weary giant climbed to his feet. In his
embarrassment, Clacker didn't look at his companions, but just stormed away
down the tunnel, each banging footstep falling like a hammer on a nail in Drizzt
Do'Urden's heart.
"Perhaps you should have finished it, dark elf,' Belwar suggested, moving beside
his drow friend.
"He saved my life in the illithid cavern,' Drizzt retorted sharply. "And has been a
loyal friend.'
"He tried to kill me, and you,' the deep gnome said grimly. "Magga cammara!'
"I am his friend!" Drizzt growled, grabbing the svirfneblin's shoulder. "You ask me
to kill him?"
"I ask you to act as his friend,' retorted Belwar, and he pulled free of the grasp
and started away down the tunnel after Clacker.
Drizzt grabbed the burrow-warden's shoulder again and roughly spun him
around.
"It will only get worse, dark elf,' Belwar said calmly into Drizzt's grimace. "A firmer
hold does the wizard's spell gain with every passing day. Clacker will try to kill us
again, I fear, and if he succeeds, the realization of the act will destroy him more
fully than your blades ever could!"
"I cannot kill him,' Drizzt said, and he was no longer angry. "Nor can you:'
"Then we must leave him,' the deep gnome replied. "We must let Clacker go free
in the Underdark, to live his life as a hook horror. That surely is what he will
become, body and spirit:'
"No,' said Drizzt. "We must not leave him. We are his only chance. We must help
him:'
"The wizard is dead,' Belwar reminded him, and the deep gnome turned away
and started again after Clacker.
"There are other wizards,' Drizzt replied under his breath, this time making no
move to impede the burrow-warden. The drow's eyes narrowed and he snapped
his scimitars back into their sheaths. Drizzt knew what he must do, what price his
friendship with Clacker demanded, but he found the thought too disturbing to
accept.
There were indeed other wizards in the Underdark, but chance meetings were far
from common, and wizards capable of dispelling Clacker's polymorphed state
would be fewer still. Drizzt knew where such wizards could be found, though.
The thought of returning to his homeland haunted Drizzt with every step he and
his companions took that day. Having viewed the consequences of his decision
to leave Menzoberranzan, Drizzt never wanted to see the place again, never
wanted to look upon the dark world that had so damned him.
But if he chose now not to return, Drizzt knew that he would soon witness a more
wicked sight than Menzoberranzan. He would watch Clacker, a friend who had
saved him from certain death, degenerate fully into a hook horror. Belwar had
suggested abandoning Clacker, and that course seemed preferable to the battle
that Drizzt and the deep gnome surely must fight if they were near Clacker when
the degeneration became complete.
Even if Clacker were far removed, though, Drizzt knew that he would witness the
degeneration. His thoughts would stay on Clacker, the friend he had abandoned,
for the rest of his days, just one more pain for the tormented drow.
In all the world, Drizzt could think of nothing he desired less than viewing the
sights of Menzoberranzan or conversing with his former people. Given the
choice, he would prefer death over returning to the drow city, but the choice was
not so simple. It hinged on more than Drizzt's personal desires. He had founded
his life on principles, and those principles now demanded loyalty. They
demanded that he put Clacker's needs above his own desires, because Clacker
had befriended him and because the concept of true friendship far outweighed
personal desires.
Later on, when the friends had set camp for a short rest, Belwar noticed that
Drizzt was engaged in some inner conflict. Leaving Clacker, who once again was
tap-tapping at the stone wall, the svirfneblin moved cautiously by the drow's side.
Belwar cocked his head curiously. "What are you thinking, dark elf!"
Drizzt, too caught up in his emotional turbulence, did not return Belwar's gaze.
"My homeland boasts a school of wizardry,' Drizzt replied with steadfast
determination.
At first the burrow-warden didn't understand what Drizzt hinted at, but then, when
Drizzt glanced over to Clacker, Belwar realized the implications of Drizzt's simple
statement.
"Menzoberranzan?" the svirfneblin cried. "You would return there, hoping that
some dark elf wizard would show mercy upon our pech friend?"
"I would return there because Clacker has no other chance,' Drizzt retorted
angrily.
"Then no chance at all has Clacker,' Belwar roared. "Magga cammara, dark elf.
Menzoberranzan will not be so quick to welcome you!"
"Perhaps your pessimism will prove valid,' said Drizzt. "Dark elves are not moved
by mercy, I agree, but there may be other options:'
"You are hunted,' Belwar said. His tone showed that he hoped his simple words
would shake some sense into his drow companion.
"By Matron Malice,' Drizzt retorted. "Menzoberranzan is a large place, my little
friend, and loyalties to my mother will play no part in any encounter we find
beyond those with my own family. I assure you that I have no plans to meet
anyone from my own family!"
And what, dark elf, might we offer in exchange for dispelling Clacker's curse?"
Belwar replied sarcastically. "What have we to offer that any dark elf wizard of
Menzoberranzan would value?"
Drizzt's reply started with a blurring cut of a scimitar, was heightened by a
familiar simmering fire in the drow's lavender eyes, and ended with a simple
statement that even stubborn Belwar could not find the words to refute.
"The wizard's life:'
CHAPTER 23
RIPPLES
Matron Baenre took a long and careful scan of Malice Do'Urden, measuring how
greatly the trials of Zin-carla had weighed on the matron mother. Deep lines of
worry creased Malice's once smooth face, and her stark white hair, which had
been the envy of her generation, was, for one of the very few times in five
centuries, frazzled and unkempt.
Most striking, though, were Malice's eyes, once radiant and alert but now dark
with weariness and sunken in the sockets of her dark skin.
"Zaknafein almost had him:' Malice explained, her voice an uncharacteristic
whine. "Drizzt was in his grasp, and yet somehow, my son managed to escape!
"But the spirit-wraith is close on his trail again:' Malice quickly added, seeing
Matron Baenre's disapproving frown. In addition to being the most powerful figure
in all of Menzoberranzan, the withered matron mother of House Baenre was
considered Lloth's personal representative in the city. Matron Baenre's approval
was Lloth's approval, and, by the same logic, Matron Baenre's disapproval most
often spelled disaster for a house.
"Zin-carla requires patience, Matron Malice:' Matron Baenre said calmly. "It has
not been so long:'
Malice relaxed a bit, until she looked again at her surroundings. She hated the
chapel of House Baenre, so huge and demeaning. The entire Do'Urden complex
could fit within this single chamber, and if Malice's family and soldiers were
multiplied ten times over, they still would not fill the rows of benches. Directly
above the central altar, directly above Matron Malice, loomed the illusionary
image of the gigantic spider, shifting into the form of a beautiful drow female,
then back again into an arachnid. Sitting here alone with Matron Baenre under
that overpowering image made Malice feel even more insignificant.
Matron Baenre sensed her guest's uneasiness and moved to comfort her. "You
have been given a great gift,' she said sincerely. "The Spider Queen would not
bestow Zin-carla, and would not have accepted the sacrifice of SiNafay Hun'ett, a
matron mother, if she did not approve of your methods and your intent:'
"It is a trial,' Malice replied offhandedly.
"A trial you will not fail!" Matron Baenre retorted. "And then the glories you will
know, Malice Do'Urden! When the spirit-wraith of he who was Zaknafein has
completed his task and your renegade son is dead, you will sit in honor on the
ruling council. Many years, I promise you, will pass before any house will dare to
threaten House Do'Urden. The
Spider Queen will shine her favor upon you for the proper completion of Zincarla.
She will hold your house in the highest regard and will defend you against
rivals:'
"What if Zin-carla fails?" Malice dared to ask. "Let us suppose. . :' Her voice
trailed away as Matron Baenre's eyes widened in shock.
"Speak not the words!" Baenre scolded. "And think not of such impossibilities!
You grow distracted by fear, and that alone will spell your doom. Zin-carla is an
exercise of willpower and a test of your devotion to the Spider Queen. The spiritwraith
is an extension of your faith and your strength. If you falter in your trust,
then the spirit-wraith of Zaknafein will falter in his quest!"
"I will not falter!" Malice roared, her hands clenched around the armrests of her
chair. "I accept the responsibility of my son's sacrilege, and with Lloth's help and
blessings,
I will enact the appropriate punishment upon Drizzt:'
Matron Baenre relaxed back in her seat and nodded her approval. She had to
support Malice in this endeavor, by the command of Lloth, and she knew enough
of Zin-carla to understand that confidence and determination were two of the
primary ingredients for success. A matron mother involved in Zin-carla had to
proclaim her trust in Lloth and her desire to please Lloth often and sincerely.
Now, though, Malice had another problem, a distraction she could ill afford. She
had come to House Baenre of her own volition, seeking aid.
"Then of this other matter,' Matron Baenre prompted, fast growing tired of the
meeting.
"I am vulnerable,' Malice explained. "Zin-carla steals my energy and attention. I
fear that another house may seize the opportunity:'
"No house has ever attacked a matron mother in the thralls of Zin-carla,' Matron
Baenre pointed out, and Malice realized that the withered old drow spoke from
experience.
"Zin-carla is a rare gift,' Malice replied, "given to powerful matrons with powerful
houses, almost assuredly in the highest favor of the Spider Queen. Who would
attack under such circumstances? But House Do'Urden is far different. We have
just suffered the consequences of war. Even with the addition of some of House
Hun'ett's soldiers, we are crippled. It is well known that I have not yet regained
Lloth's favor but that my house is eighth in the city, putting me on the ruling
council, an enviable position:'
"Your fears are misplaced,' Matron Baenre assured her, but Malice slumped back
in frustration in spite of the words. Matron Baenre shook her head helplessly. "I
see that my words alone cannot soothe. Your attention must be on Zin-carla.
Understand that, Malice Do'Urden. You have no time for such petty worries:'
"They remain,' said Malice.
"Then I will end them,' offered Matron Baenre. "Return to your house now, in the
company of two hundred Baenre soldiers. The numbers will secure your
battlements, and my soldiers shall wear the house emblem of Baenre. None in
the city will dare to strike with such allies:'
A wide smile rolled across Malice's face, a grin that diminished a few of those
worry lines. She accepted Matron Baenre's generous gift as a signal that perhaps
Lloth still did favor House Do'Urden.
"Go back to your home and concentrate on the task at hand,' Matron Baenre
continued. "Zaknafein must find Drizzt again and kill him. That is the deal you
offered to the Spider Queen. But fear not for the spirit-wraith's last failure or the
time lost. A few days, or weeks, is not very long in Lloth's eyes. The proper
conclusion of Zin-carla is all that matters:'
"You will arrange for my escort?" Malice asked, rising from her chair.
"It is already waiting,' Matron Baenre assured her.
Malice walked down from the raised central dais and out through the many rows
of the giant chapel. The huge room was dimly lit, and Malice could barely see, as
she exited, another figure moving toward the central dais from the opposite
direction. She assumed it to be Matron Baenre's companion illithid, a common
figure in the great chapel. If Malice had known that Matron Baenre's mind flayer
had left the city on some private business in the west, she might have paid more
heed to the distant figure.
Her worry lines would have increased tenfold.
"Pitiful,' Jarlaxle remarked as he ascended to sit beside Matron Baenre. "This is
not the same Matron Malice Do'Urden that I knew only a few short months ago:'
"Zin-carla is not cheaply given,' Matron Baenre replied.
"The toll is great,' Jarlaxle agreed. He looked straight at Matron Baenre, reading
her eyes as well as her forthcoming reply. "Will she fail?"
Matron Baenre chuckled aloud, a laugh that sounded more like a wheeze. "Even
the Spider Queen could only guess at the answer. My-our-soldiers should lend
Matron Malice enough comfort to complete the task. That is my hope at least.
Malice Do'Urden once was in Lloth's highest regard, you know. Her seat on the
ruling council was demanded by the Spider Queen:'
"Events do seem to lead to the completion of Lloth's will,' Jarlaxle snickered,
remembering the battle between House Do'Urden and House Hun'ett, in which
Bregan D'aerthe had played the pivotal role. The consequences of that victory,
the elimination of House Hun'ett, had put House Do'Urden in the city's eighth
position and, thus, had placed Matron Malice on the ruling council.
"Fortunes smile on the favored,' Matron Baenre remarked.
Jarlaxle's grin was replaced by a suddenly serious look. "And is Malice-Matron
Malice,' he quickly corrected, seeing Baenre's immediate glower, "now in the
Spider Queen's favor? Will fortunes smile on House Do'Urden?"
"The gift of Zin-carla removed both favor and disfavor, I would assume,' Matron
Baenre explained. "Matron Malice's fortunes are for her and her spirit-wraith to
determine:'
"Or, for her son-this infamous Drizzt Do'Urden-to destroy,' Jarlaxle completed. "Is
this young warrior so very powerful? Why has Lloth not simply crushed him?"
"He has forsaken the Spider Queen,' Baenre replied, "fully and with all his heart.
Lloth has no power over Drizzt and has determined him to be Matron Malice's
problem:'
"A rather large problem, it would seem,' Jarlaxle chuckled with a quick shake of
his bald head. The mercenary noticed immediately that Matron Baenre did not
share his mirth.
"Indeed,' she replied somberly, and her voice trailed off on the word as she sank
back for some private thoughts. She knew the dangers, and the possible profits,
of Zin-carla better than anyone in the city. Thrice before Matron Baenre had
asked for the Spider Queen's greatest gift, and twice before she had seen Zincarla
through to successful completion. With the unrivaled grandeur of House
Baenre all about her, Matron Baenre could not forget the gains of Zin-carla's
success. But every time she saw her withered reflection in a pool or a mirror, she
was vividly reminded of the heavy price.
Jarlaxle did not intrude on the matron mother's reflections. The mercenary
contemplated on his own at that moment. In a time of trial and confusion such as
this, a skilled opportunist would find only gain. By Jarlaxle's reckoning, Bregan
D'aerthe could only profit from the granting of Zin-carla to Matron Malice. If
Malice proved successful and reinforced her seat on the ruling council, Jarlaxle
would have another very powerful ally within the city. If the spirit-wraith failed, to
the ruin of House Do'Urden, the price on this young Drizzt's head certainly would
escalate to a level that might tempt the mercenary band.
As she had on her journey to the first house of the city, Malice imagined
ambitious gazes following her return through the winding streets of
Menzoberranzan. Matron
Baenre had been quite generous and gracious. Accepting the premise that the
withered old matron mother was indeed Lloth's voice in the city, Malice could
barely contain her smile.
Undeniably, though, the fears still remained. How readily would Matron Baenre
come to Malice's aid if Drizzt continued to elude Zaknafein, if Zin-carla ultimately
failed? Malice's position on the ruling council would be tenuous then-as would the
continued existence of House Do'Urden.
The caravan passed House Fey-Branche, ninth house of the city and most
probably the greatest threat to a weakened House Do'Urden. Matron Halavin
Fey-Branche was no doubt watching the procession beyond her adamantite
gates, watching the matron mother who now held the coveted eighth seat on the
ruling council.
Malice looked at Dinin and the ten soldiers of House Do'Urden, walking by her
side as she sat atop the floating magical disc. She let her gaze wander to the two
hundred soldiers, warriors openly bearing the proud emblem of House Baenre,
marching with disciplined precision behind her modest troupe.
What must Matron Halavin Fey-Branche be thinking at such a sight? Malice
wondered. She could not contain her ensuing smile. "Our greatest glories are
soon to come,' Malice assured her warrior son. Dinin nodded and returned the
wide smile, wisely not daring to steal any of the joy from his volatile mother.
Privately, though, Dinin couldn't ignore his disturbing suspicions that many of the
Baenre soldiers, drow warriors he had never had the occasion to meet before,
looked vaguely familiar. One of them even shot a sly wink at the elderboy of
House Do'Urden.
Jarlaxle's magical whistle being blown on the balcony of House Do'Urden came
vividly to Dinin's mind.
CHAPTER24
FAITH
Drizzt and Belwar did not have to remind each other of the significance of the
green glow that appeared far ahead up the tunnel. Together they quickened their
pace to catch up with and warn Clacker, who continued his approach with strides
quickened by curiosity. The hook horror always led the party now, Clacker simply
had become too dangerous for Drizzt and Belwar to allow him to walk behind.
Clacker turned abruptly at their sudden approach, waved a claw menacingly, and
hissed.
"Pech:' Belwar whispered, speaking the word he had been using to strike a
recollection in his friend's fast-fading consciousness. The troupe had turned back
toward the east, toward Menzoberranzan, as soon as Drizzt had convinced the
burrow-warden of his determination to aid Clacker. Belwar, having no other
options, had finally agreed with the drow's plan as Clacker's only hope, but,
though they had turned immediately and had quickened their march, both now
feared that they would not arrive in time. The transformation in Clacker had been
dramatic since the confrontation with the duergar. The hook horror could barely
speak and often turned threateningly on his friends.
"Pech,' Belwar said again as he and Drizzt neared the amious monster.
The hook horror paused, confused.
"Pech" Belwar growled a third time, and he tapped his hammer-hand against the
stone wall.
As if a light of recognition had suddenly gone on within the turmoil that was his
consciousness, Clacker relaxed and dropped his heavy arms to his sides.
Drizzt and Belwar looked past the hook horror to the green glow and exchanged
concerned glances. They had committed themselves fully to this course and had
little choice in their actions now.
"Corbies live in the chamber beyond,' Drizzt began quietly, speaking each word
slowly and distinctly to ensure that Clacker understood. "We have to get directly
across and out the other side swiftly, for if we hope to avoid a battle, we have no
time for delays. Take care in your steps. The only walkways are narrow and
treacherous:'
"C-C-Clac-" the hook horror stammered futilely.
"Clacker,' Belwar offered.
"I-I-I'll-" Clacker stopped suddenly and threw a claw out in the direction of the
green-glowing chamber.
"Clacker lead?" Drizzt said, unable to bear the hook horror's struggling. "Clacker
lead,' Drizzt said again, seeing the great head bobbing in accord.
Belwar didn't seem so sure of the wisdom of that suggestion. "We have fought
the bird-men before and have seen their tricks,' the svirfneblin reasoned. "But
Clacker has not:'
"The sheer bulk of the hook horror should deter them,' Drizzt argued. "Clacker's
mere presence may allow us to avoid a fight:'
"Not against the corbies, da